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i PAGE FOUR Daily work seems unwaranted in the light of ex City College. Frederick C. Shipley | summer session there, says that the work of = AILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1946 1=\ |1 20 YEARS AGO = | from i THE EMPIRE o oAy erans has been outstanding, that, if anything Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska rying to overload their schedul l x e est ? y the greatest return in the shortest poss ! - - Vice-President AN & - and Manager ' Interested when a veteran chemistry ins i OCTOBER, 10, 1936 ELMER A 5 5 Fing Editor | ported that his group of G. Is cons e best! o 10 o The eastern half of Douglas, including the Indian village, and all of s . ~————— |class in my entire experience,” Shipley bes e Dr Ri | H. Williams readwell, lay in ruins and ashes as the result of a fire which started ek Otfice in Juneau a5 Second Class Matter. | with other teachers. A physicist reported . Mabel Jackson | early this morning and was not brought under control until early this Delivered by carrier in Juneau 0 per month; | group I've ever had” A biologist echoed . W. L. Baldwin ® | night. The loss of property was estimated at over $200,000. The fire AR, | we've ever seen.” A professor of hist ° Carla ® ! tarted from sparks falling on the roof of an abandoned house in the dvance. $15.0 \ ‘advance, $7.50 n‘wu"d LG ;mpm\v-n}wh' 1 . George I o |mdian village. Embers flew in all directions. Thirty-eight residences 4 students,” a teacher psychce {er /ebster favor if they Wil promptly motify e fana e s R R ¢ Ken Yebstel in the white section of Douglas and Treadwell occupied by bachelors or P failure or irr 1 delivery | erans as very ambitious and extremely eag . Roberta Ormes o _ dd g highest possible grades Ny ion o g o |families were destroyed. Forty-two Indian families had been burned out| ews Office, 602; Business Office, 374 Bt bt . : ® C R i " X AR s 3 ko : = 5 This, after all, should astonish nobody. These men | o Raymond Hill o |and were homeless, with only the clothes on their backs. The feiry | MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS are not youths going to college just because they feel| o A. E. Lundstrum e |Teddy kept operating between Juneau and Douglas taking fire fighters e Eress ia Ot Bt o8 it is the thing to do, a consideration which sometimes | o Olga Daytor e [to the scene. By late afternoon many of the white families had been wise cr news published | mgves youngsters just out of high school. They have| o ® igiven temporary housing in the Nat, school building or private homes. | nere = | been around, have seen things, have decided iTom eX-|q o ¢ o o o © o & © © ks - 5 aska Newspapers, 1411 | pap > th 3 alds 1o avs @ llegia s g NA L e perience (hat in.many :jields nowhdays o bollsgikee v The Cardinals won the World Series by defeating the Yankees in F education is almost indispensable for one who wishes year with industry, wallops du g the past ) the shipping t of bott ge is the worst have been tests of strength, just as real any ever Alaskans have taken a good many below-the-belt! .40 o1 pattlefields, even if Infinitely less costly. Yet | Republican presidential nomination, | the many inter-| amidst all the gloom it is somewhat reassuring to |SPlit sharply today over the Nazi caused by strikes 'believe that if all concerned did not regard the pros-|War crimes trial 5 | but the | pective settlements as reasonably permanent the tests| AS Democrats kept up their at-| would not be made. Men do not fight hard today over |tacks on Taft’s criticism of far as water Solutions which are likely to be reversed tomorrow N"""""“”{ ‘;‘“f" “: Dewey 1“{'[’”"‘"‘ e The issue of 1 e may bg a war-breeder. It might off the GOP leadership clash in ned with the While they do it ion unloading e squabble, th that not 1ake Irse off we can get fresh pr is better r express Sitka, for example, is really having a bad time—| potatoes or onions; and | There is 1o reason why a diplomatic war should not This typical of the hundreds of small communities not on no eggs, flour, meat, sugar, other foods will soon be gone. the route of the airliners from the St According to the “‘Committee For in Seattle which recently very tough for any more ‘relief ance. The outlook is indeed gloomy. ficials can't seem to get excited about the prospect of a few thousand Alaskans running out of food with an electibn coming up Veterans as Eager Students (New York Sun) Any disposition to feel that, in taking advantage afforded under the G Bills of Rights, some veterans may be seeking merely to postpone the necessity for getting down to hard of educational opportunities SHIPPING SITUATION local and Outside labor now completely cut off officials seems of t tough on Alaskans. hough it is expensive. authorized the sailing of the S. S. Cordova for Nome, “from the comments of the rank and file longshoremen and seamen it may be ships to get clear- DEWEY AT ISSUE to get to the top. Virtually ail of them enter college with no uncertainty about the course they wish to pursue. They know which of the sciences or the arts VER | is for them. Stripped of that uncertainty, they appar- WITH TAF[ ja ently concentrate on their goals. Such a group can | exercise a fine leavening influence on the s of any college. NAZI CONVICTION “A lr'erut:; that \\'ii] En&urv" Demo(rafs HGAII Ueavage, (New York Times) When Senator Connally told his fellow-delegates of Ranking GOPs on | ambassadors of the peace of the world, to make a e | peace that will endure for years,” the words must have (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) |echoed strangely. In this peace conference there has| Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New been much talk about peace. The debated settlements | York and Senator Robert A. Taft ofy Ohio, potential rivals ce by © ™V als0 be a peace-breeder. O the RS Mr. Molotov, hurrying to Moscow and delaying | desire to make hjs yeturn, was evidently in the throes of arriving at, to us that by or being pushed into, decisior Secretary Byrnes, the Canadian 'preparing his Stuttgart speech, must have gone through at they are going .the same process. Senator Connally, arriving fresh ir the dusty arena, brought decisions of his own which are pretty much those of other articulate Americans. The confusion is disheartening, but there are many signs that the decisive stage of this diplomatic war is | approaching. A military war ends in peace, or, as at the moment, at least in a cessation of hostilities loss of se New York last night when he came out bluntly in opposition to the Ohio Senator's views. Without mentioning Taft name, Dewey defended the fairness | of the trials and declared: “No one | can have the sympathy for these! Jazi leaders who brought such agony upon the world.” i In Washington, Democrats whoj have experienced their own mua-: | than some com- oduce and other party troubles of late, gleefully hail- ed the Taft-Dewey cleavage as like-| js | end in the same fashion, assuming that the parties to it are willing When Mr. Molotov again opens up we shall know more as to how willing Soviet Russia is. The fact that she consented tc a meeting of the Big Four Prime Ministers suggested that she might not wish to post- pone peace indefinitely. Perhaps the prolongation of Mr. Molotov’s Mescow weekend was due to a modified appraisal of about how much Russia can hope to extract in the way of concessions from her Western neighbors. We may be nearer than we thought to a “peace that will endure for years. e rec: foreign policy schism be- tween then Secretary of Commerce | ITenry A, Wallace and Secretary of ! State James F. Byrnes. .- ates. Maritime Unity” Leota Thursday 9:15 with O'Harra M. S am. to con-} nect banks or Anchorage. See J. B. Bur- ford. adv. | of- ] Government | NOTICE OF REDEMPTION 4 $70,000 TOWN OF SITKA, ALASKA | 1943 GENERAL OBLIGATION /¢/{ BONDS In a government bulletin on vacation, it is stated, “women like to g0 where there are plenty of men Some one must have called a bureaucrat aside and N } b : tha gtk i Notice is hereby given that ti told him a few facts of life. 5 : i City of \ (formerly the Town of T v 3 | sitka) has exercised its option to! After taking a good look at the general situation | .cjeem and does hereby call for T we concluded that whatever it was we worrying about 10 years ago undoubtedly must been trivial. were 1. | teday, demption Seventy Thousand Dollar ($70,000)0 1943 General Obligation Bends of the Town of Sitka, dated have The Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continuea yrom Page One) ling hous- when a sensational shooting occurred. As a result, h“. was forced to resign as a member of the governing board of his church, but his status both as a Klansman and member of the At-| lanta City Council continues un- impaired. 0. B. Cawthon, City Councilman, attends Klan No. 1 ta Klan F. Lee Evans, City long-time Secretary Klan headquarters and east Atlan- Councilman, of Atlanta Cecil Hester, Councilman and Police Commissioner, memby Klan No. 1 ! Ellis Barrett, County Commis- sioner, attends Klan No. 1 Neil G. Ellis, Assistant Chief, At-| lanta Police Department, atten Klan No. 1. Jimmie Helms, head of Klokan No. 1 R. E. Jones Ccunty and City Atlanta Klan 297 H. C. Edson, Klansmas brother of a Kiansman cor n East P Kian flog c Dr. R. H. Eubanks, active speak- in Klan No. 1 | Vester Ownby, former Cyclops of Riverside tlanta) Klan; chief spokesn for new outfit “The Columbians” who describe themselves as “40 times worse than the Klan These a! e gentlemen who will do Talmadge's biddi; a con- vention (Konven better name) which will set policy for the Detective 4 Klan City Committee, and O. R Detectives, Jones, attend 1 and victed er now at is a Democratic party during the ne: four years. And the Demo- cratic par is all-jowerful in Georgia, what this convention does will be the law in Georgia Among other things, it plans to abolish all rule regulating pri- maries—and whoever wins the pri- mary wins the final election in Georgia. It will also undertake at plans to stop trains and b state lines in crder to overrul S. Supreme Court on Jim C Gene And no turns back the amed Klansmen p them madge’s boast is al- ways keeps his promises it matter how far clock, the above will help him ke TRUCULENT i URTLI FREAK FIRE Commander Thomas D. Flight November 1, 1943 numbered 1 to 140, | Davies and crew members of the which, unlike Wallace's never was inclusive, payable serially in num- Navy’s Truculent Turtle will make'delivered, consisted of 19 pa erical order on November 1 in the} a detailed report to the Navy De-| The State Department killed 17]} 1948 to 1963, inclusive, anu partment of a scientific phenom- | pages, sent 2 pages back ‘“cleared.”| bearing interest at the rate of four — enon that occurred while their ice-' Although it did not go as far as|per centum per annum. | | crusted plane was flying at 12,000 Wallace, the Krug speech did take Said bonds are hereby called for e S e WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “He placed his fortune aL‘ for the 1948|their disposition.” Say, “He placed his fortune at their disposal.” Pronounce pro ra-ta, first {increase our vocabulary SUBSERVIENT; useful in an inferior capacity; servile, { entirely subservient must have had a bad time with him "—Mrs. Hum- by ! phry Ward. e EMODERN ETIQUETTE ¥operra ree || { that is bus for Fair-| e { quality the seventh and final game by the score of 3 to 2 The Empire doubled the capacity of its job-press room by installing 2 new automatic Kelly printing press. One unfortunate woman of Douglas Weather: High, 51; low, 50; partly cloudy. Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Pro rata. A as in RAY, accent following the first A. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Dungeon. Observe the EO. SYNONYMS: Visible, visudl, apparent, discernible, perceptible, per- the} coivable | WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours. mastering one word each day. Q. Where there is a very distinguished dinner guest in one's home, is it proper that all the invited guests meet this honored guest? | A. Yes; it is the duty of the hostess to see that everyone meets the ! ly to lessen the emphasis on the distinguished guest. | Should the guest at a card party ever apologize for his game?\ No; if he makes a bad mistake, he may say, “I am sorry,” but | Q A. sufficient. Q. A. Yes, she should a oid pink or any shade. LOOK and LEARN I;;y_ C. GORDON What two cities from ancient times have been fameus far the of their steel weapons? Who was the first great Christian missionary? What is a gourmand? In printing, what are “upper case” letters? What is the meaning of the French phrase “entre nous”? ANSWERS: Damascus, Syria, and Toledo, Spain. Paul. One who delights in luxurious food. Capitals. Between ourselves; confidentially. BRSO o s JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. —HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL WELDING Third and Franklin PLUMBRBL PHONE 787 who had evidently lost every- ! thing else in the fire was seen walking down St. Ann's Avenue with a bird- | cage in one hand and a kitten in the other Let us Today'’s word: “Any wife not Is there any certain cclor of freck that a girl with a pronounced zrom Auk Bay jsallow or olive-toned complexion should avoid? A | 1 | ! { | | CONCRETE For Every Purpose JUST PHONE y 182 or f 039-2 Long, 2 Short AND —DELIVERY WILL BEGIN WITHIN A FEW MINUTES * Juneau Ready-Mix Concrete, Ine “There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising!- feet between Reno Nevada, and Og- issue with some parts of the|redemption on November 1, 1946, at den, Utah. Byrnes polic, It was after he!par plus accrued interest to that The propeller of the Truculent heard of Krug's treatment by the|date. Holders of said bonds are Turtle was enveloped by a hug(|State Department that Wallace| hereby notified to present the same halo of “St. Elmo’s fire,” an el wrote his speech and sent it to the | for payment at the First Bank of tromagnetic discharge that re-| White House direct. . . .Postmaster Sitka, in Sitka, Alaska, on or prior sembles a greenish-blue flame and General Bob Hannegan, worried |to November 1, 1946. Any bond not is four times as bright as the Gver the administration’s fumbling | Dresented for redemption shall cease northern lights. |of the Palestine problem, has writ- | to bear interest from and after “St. Elmo’s fire” is not new to ten President Truman urging that|November 1, 1946. science. Its discovery dates back he send Ed Pauley to London to| Dated September 30, 1946. to the middle ages, when the same |ty to get some action in improving | CLTTOF SITER (SDASIA kind of electrical glow was observed | the situation in the displaced per- | By ERANE OATHAN, zround church steeples. {sons camps for Jews in Germany.| : City Clerk However, Commander Davies will | First publication, Oct. 3, 1946, report that never beiore in his (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE. INC. 1946) / Last publication, Oct. 10, 1946, experience as a Navy pilot has an i 2 2 o4 airplane undergone such a freak- ish hazard. d p Zl Small fingers of the blinding Cl‘OSSWOl’ uzzie electrical flame darted up inside s! the bulletproof windshield, not in- oaehonp 5 Bayiase side the cockpit, but inside the very 4. Staring open- S chamber glass itself, creating a strange neon ¢ oguihed 3L Away etfect, Commander Davies disclosed 0. s ooavort in a preliminary report to super-' 13 phaie fag 40, Minte ice ment. of flowers S ending Mei all radio reception in| 11 Monkey | A%o Rronoyn: the Truculent Turtle was cut Off.' 19 Leap. dlalectlc 45. Symbol for ‘It made our hair stand on end 30, Saprichn GRS for a while,” Commandtr Davies 9 i reported to friends. “Of course, I knew that we were safe, because ! the gas tanks were well protected i inside the plane, but it’s hard to| DOWN 4 Partof a curve be objective when you are up in T e 5. Score In ) the clouds at night in a cockpit R DY i fnoldins | and something like that hits you. &4 Bollcious shem 3. iChilegein 6 e same. Jff Later, when the plane’s wind- 65 I L Kentuck 7. Berry of a shield was examined, no apparent Sipi DR EL damage had been done to the gls 9. Oue of the by the freakish incident 3 tnen CAPITAL CHAFF | Street, though not working for Senator Jim Mead, would not isasrean ke greatly disappointed if he li poetic governor Tom Dewey in November. ARy “The Street” already has decided Worship Senator Bob Taft is its man ior iatian [ the 1948 Presidential nomination, Lasso i and feels it would be casier to put Chdne Taft over if Dewey fails in his bid Fhtlippine for re-election as Governor of At ‘ New York There are NOW two| sub rosa pilgrimages which bigwig visitors make in Washington: to the Wardman Park Hotel to visit \ with Henry Wallace, and to Oxon | Hul, Md, to visit Sumner Wells | President Truman might be sur- b prised at some of those still in his administration who have been seen J cotton fabrie in the vicinity of both The Brother of famous fore:,. poiicy speech by D Secretary of the Interior Krug PERCY REYNOLDS as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon to the box office of the ' CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: * “TALL IN THE SADDLE" Federal Tax—12c per Person PHONE 14__THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 /]| SECOND and FOURTH 1 DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST Monday of each month ¥ BLOMGREN BUILDING in Scottish Rite Temple ?" Phone 56 beginning at 7:30 p. m. ' HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. M. L. MacSPADDEN, e Worshipful Master; LEIVERS, Secretary. D — James W. James C. Cooper, CPA BUSINESS COUNSELOR Specializing in Corporation—Mdnieipal and Trust Accounts Silver Bow Lodge ™' mm, A 2 LOOF, .. Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M, I. O. O. F. HALL, Visiting Brothers Welcome GEORGE JORGENSON, Noble Grand; H. V. CALLOW, Secretary €D B.P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. E. C. REYNOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery f.’lll)NE 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices A METCALFE SHEET METAL Heating—Aircenditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR ""The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Seward. Street Near Third Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Mausical Instruments and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward 1 o ] HEINKE GENERAL b S ¥ REPAIR SHOP kina Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burnei y Blacksmith Work it Cfii’l}"% ti SHESRIAL IEEALS W Onm Juneaw’s Most Popular Phene 204 929 W. 12th St. “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS “The Store for Men"” PHONE 202 SABINS ¥OR 1 Front St—Triangle Bldg. Wall Paper . 1y : Warfield's Drug Store Ideal Paint Shop (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL, Fatally i Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt HORLUCK'S DANISH T B Douglas Boat Shop NEW CONSTRUCTION and HUTCHINGS ECONOMY REPAIR JOBS MARKET FREE ESTIMATE Choice Meats At All Times Phone Douglas 192 Located in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 The Alaskan Hotel The Charles W. Carter Newly Renovated Rooms | at Reasonable Rates MortuarY | PHONE SIN( Fourth and Franklin Sts. | | . SINGLESO PHONE 136 | [ VANITY BEAUTY Card Beverage Co. SALON Wholesale 805 10th st. | | Cooper Building PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT | | | ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager for MIXERS or SODA POP Open Evenings Phone 318 e $ kS ALASKA ELECTRONICS | Sales and Service i BOX 2165 PHONE 62 : Hallicrafters . . Admiral . . Bendix and Sentinel Radios EXPERT REPAIRS ON ANY 2 RADIO EQUIPMENT MOTORSHIP ESTEBETH ; o HAINES “* SKAGWAY "~ MONDAY | . 10 PM. § Leaves for ! SITKA and Wayporis every Wednesday 6 P.M. PASSENGERS, FREIGHT and MAIL 1891—0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1946 * The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS