The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 21, 1946, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

1946 - PAGE FOUR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA T MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, D .l 1’ k E N {to get together. Further, it would appeal to the com- ! | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NoO. — , 7 NEAU NO. 147 / men sense of the country and help to fix clearly the i L R R e 20 YEARS AGO om | DR. E. H. KASER | |<rcown wa rovrmn Bk PRINTING COMPANY ' Its first purpose would be to emphasize the broad a THE EMPIRE ¢ DENTIST | Monday of each month . Second and Main Streets. Juneau, Alaska o ¢ i A i - BLOMGREN BUILDING | in Scottish Rite Temple ¥ © Juneau, Alaska ¢ | of agreement between the parties. It would keep men L s S | p ok o - - Vice-President on the job during negotiations b L - " - - 'Editor and Manager S i i ( g T OCTOBER 21, 1926 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. | | M. L. MacSPADDEN - - M ging Edito Not only does Farris cit itish g - 4 ¥ it ’ s being feted: | | & % Bt Busiess Mansger ks ()q l); i ]Tlh]‘lyr“" lf '; g l‘ P l{ : “;:( N . Queen Marie of Rumania arrived in New York and was being feted; | | Worshipful Master; James W. A TR g M Bl et e L o OCTOBER 21 . V. Debs, Socialist head, died in New York; Havana was hit by a | | LEIVERS, Secretary. 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES P also calls attention to the unanimous agreements|, Malcolm Morrison . ane, 1800 persons were injured and property damage was estimated James c. cooper, CPA | —— Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.70 per month; |reached in the management-labor conferences called| o Luba Petievich @] at thirty million dollars BUSINESS COUNSELOR ’ Silver Bow Lodge six months, $3.00; ene year, $15.00 by both President Roosevelt and President Truman.|e Mrs. E. W. Hagerup ° P | Specializing in No. A 2 loo:, b One vea Had Congress accepteG tne advice of Mr. Truman and | e Mildred Ju!l‘x\“von 4 The American Legion Post announced plans for a dance on Armistice | Corporation—Municipal and 'Meets each Tues- \ e sromptly notify ' provided for a really broad-gauge study of the prob-|e Berthele Elison . Day in A, B.-Hall | Trust Accounts day at 8:00 P. M, I. O, O. F. HALL, ihe Business Oftice of a1 v in the delivery 'Jo; of strike-prevencion, it might well have started|® Dr. W. M. Whitehead L/ e i i Visiting Brothers Weldome . 1 of their pap N S SEREH LF <G H . s Off 2 ness 11 74 i pSe ARTE! ents oadene: o} . an Axline Rhodes . ! g Siffegin ap L o w }‘(" “:N e nnr!)hx i d \lmm )Frn ot 1 R el o| Mrs. John Newmarker and baby left for the south on the Princess GEORGE JORGENSON, Noble —_— e~ - sake of industrial peace, this work still oug ) ; & iha : ; = MEMBER OF ASSOCIATET TREER {0t ml«u. J ERHCE UG WO AL ROMERL SO Re 1S Bess Lavenik o | Louise enroute to Duluth ‘ The Erwin Feed co- Grand; H. V. CALLOW, Secretary * e t or not other- 9OF Jale Holland . 3 et iRl H ! § ws'published | Such a “code” would be a_ recognition of the|] L};‘]-'unln( 46 o' Attorney Henry Roden left for Sitka on the Estebeth Office, Reie e Crocety iy . simple fact that strikes are settled sooner or later: |, hor e it ol ; - 3 | PHONE 704 g@ B.P 0 ELKS AL laska Newspapers, 1411 Ecuire G i hora June Thunes . ®p*% 0% 0 | : R i f ONAL Alaska Newspap in the end, there is agreement, so why not resolve |, J. P. Christensen . Tom Ashby left or the Margnita for Lisianski i HAY, GRAIN, COAL Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. —- ' disputes without recourse to costly strikes and lock-| e Elizabeth Trwin o ST i and STORAGE m. Visiting brothers welcome, o ’ ®| Weather: High, 53; low, 50; cloudy. i E. C. REYNOLDS, Exalted There is alw somebody to throw cold water|» o o e e o o o ® of __ _ At e o b | A L Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, 'Secrt on suggestions, byt there is ne good reason why o b | c lr o R N I A . 4 ealy. is one should aoi bring about labor peace in the ve Wiilkie. According- | D 'I L g E l' h Y 1 Grocery and Meat Market lemg v, Adter all there is no fundamemat disagree. | . Ribbentrop's america commiveee| @Y LESSONS IN CNQNISN W, 1.. GORDON } METCALFE SHEET METAL ment between the great majority of American em-|Was again on the job, this time Vi 478 — PHONES — 371 3 s Heating—Airconditioning—Boat High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices headed by Colin Ross. e e “In the Roosevelt-Dewey WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not “I donated a dollar to the | saign, the foreign ofiice had tWO pous for jce crcam.” Say, “I GAVE a dollar to the boys.” DONATE is| pet schemes .One of these un'uly?df R G i S alled folkdom propaganda, aim- | { varicus nationalities in the| ployees and employers. They do not want to change the rules of the game. They do not argue about basic principles but about what constitutes their fair share of the In operation which have by no means been realized to Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. — el cam- | properly used when the gift is imp dollars to the church.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Vague. arnings of our industrial plaat. that fact potentialities of are co- Jones-Stevens Shop d United States with a view to get- | peaceful at Proncunce vag, A as in ATE.| FOR " the fulh ing these nationalities to vote| OFTEN MISSPELLED: Merchandise; ISE, not IZE. | LADIES'—MISSES The Rexall Store el ¥ B ssdive wvelt. Thel SYNONYMS: Orifice, aperature, opening, vent. READY-TO-WEAR i - d 1 T igainst Preside velt. he | { Your Reliable Pharmacists o' S— - Price Decontrol sther scheme involved the planting,| WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let \\s; Seward Street Near Third ; . CAN STRIKES BE PREVENTED? - it what the Nazis regarded as increase our vocabumlary by mastering one word each day. Tod word : BUTLER-MAURO i (New York Times) rucial time, on the eve of the PATRIMONY; any inheritance. (Prcnounce the A as in AT, accent| DRUG CO. Current inc the cost of living are being Congress has made it clear in the recently extended | 2lection, of some alleged secret first syllable). “Virtue is the best patrimony for a child to imberit”—| |Rlagka Music Supply oA 4 widelv resarded as indicators of a new | Price Control Act that it wants price control tapered agreements between President pyoyery, jiiore and more Widely regardec A8 BRI SC 2 -l oftiap/prombilyt as BusspIEN T B eyent Hire ifitee (LTS SRRSO ST o UMD OF | s e { | Arthur M. Uggen, Manager HARRY Mcn wave of strikes to come. Although men like Philip | controls to be extended be: Dec. 31 for insignificant | members of the former German| 71| Pianos—Musical Instruments Murray of the CIO are concentrating on the anti- |items, and not beyond June 30, 1047, for all other|Foreign Office gave us accounts of MODERN ETIOUETTE by | and Supplier Druggist flation front, hoping to keep prices sufficiently under products. However, Congress found it virtually jm-|these schemes. Schmidt fold us: < ROBERTA LEE || Phone 206 Second and Seward gg ettt ® | possible to write standards of decontrol into the law,|In 1944 the attitude prevailed that “The Squibb Store” control to head off new wage demands, in rewriting the { a4 hence a considerable amount of discretion was|anybedy would be better than Where Ph FEEEs” 5 Iieiused fiana 3 . Price Decontrol | Rocsevelt and Dewey was judged . o TR f HEINKE GENERAL g S harmacy Is 3 OPA statute, Congress hung an albatross around |ho‘;u(\cer in the hands of OPA and the Price Decontrol 2 Q. What must a hostess consider when preparing a list of dinner Professi ks of these industrial statésmen. If grocery bills|BSard, The Erice Decontrol Board in ii6 decislon t much more 1avorably than Willkie gyestso REPAIR SHOP e | recontrol meat indicated that it was using a rather {and the estimate went so far as tc . P " " sider . OW] i i v > i j Velding, Plumbing, Oil Burnei S continue to mount. working men—having had the eco- | 1. ;0 anaara for decontrol. Thus it found “that | celieve that a negotiated peace un A Fivah of 8loa 1o Mush Shslafn b own gtlesions, Jovluge thoe) Black: 'lhg Work 20TH CENTURY MEAT ) Jomic facts of life pointed out to them by their wives g o : ol At b e e to whom she is indebted, then any new persons whom she desires. s o MARKET ) nomic facts ¥ Yy ‘the supply of meat has been and will continue to be | der Dewey might be thinkable | Shat 16 fHe-ana Hime ‘hetor brid 1d write “Thi | GENERAL REPAIR WORK 4 the managers of the fumily budgets—may Well belcnort in refation to demand at reasonable prices.” Such| “I recall very well a conference| B O 8 R o eadionl BoLwv. ot e Juiieau’s Most Popular restive by next winter when many of the contracts |a criterion begs the question of what is “reasonable” |in Riktbentrop's private quarters at' you" letter for her wedding gifts? ; | s % “Meating” Place ~ in major industries will expire |.md makes possible a continuation of an unbalanced | Wilhelmstrasse where the elections A. These letters MUST be written within a month, and really ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS If something is not done soon, such discontent |condition so long as prices are held too low. fand the possibili of influencing should be written from day to day as the gifts are received. “The Store for Men” could lead to ancther serious industrial m-m,kdown,i Now, OPA has adopted an even less significant | them was discussed. Present were Q. What are the best materials for letter writing? PHONE 202 i and one does not have to argue at length that such criterion of what constitutes a balance of demand and | Dieckhoff, Gaus, Steengracht, all A. Fairly heavy white paper and black ink are always in the hest! SABINS { i section chiefs, and several members of the America Committee. “‘At that conference it Was clear- ly stated that chances of directly influencing the press were hopeless, supply. Its standard is a “Can those who buy the commedity for their own use at the existing ceiling | prices do so with the same facility and width of cholcei they had before the development of wartime pressures and is this a purely fleeting condition or is there rea- a stoppage would be disastrous. Even for the strikers of -taste 5 it might well mean losing more than they can gain i The right medicine, of course, is prevention. That's why there already is talk of getting the government - \ ( Front St.—Triangle Bldg. LOOK and LEARN ?1 C. GORDON }, Warfield's Drug Store Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop back into the industrial picture as it was during the|sonable likelihood that it will continue.” In other but that a press sur which I war. However, while drastic controls are nccvssm',\';;’?l'dfi.dunk’;S..{hl‘. .p'rc_»waf condmon§ of su_pply and|haqd made myself clearly showed ~— o ST g Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) is an emergency, they can hardlf be accepted as the | Hmfxll :}r} choice are present, control must be COn- | (ngy the majority of newspapers 1. What is the difference between engraving and embossing? NYAL Family Remedies Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt normal rule. Instead of reverting to “freezes,” a solu- llmu'“-(w ”“v "““yd“;‘li"’g“m‘ ‘f"i‘?‘;““d would make | were iy favor of Dewey. I had ar-| 2. What is the common name for sodium bicarbonate? tion must be found on the lasting basis of agreement | - VIFHURILY {mMPOSSIDie to decontrol any Important|ungeq a service in Stockholm 3. What general name is applied to animais that chew the cud ana| | HORLUCK’S DANISH Douglas Boat Shop —agreement between management and labor, perhaps and Lisbon which had no othér , . ° "o o " o stomach? | ICE CREAM Today we find that total supplies of goods are - ; 2 nctions than to advise me about larger than before the war. However, demand has nghy b the elections. The only way of in- increased even more as a result of the tripl e , 5 gacipring lof- the | fluencing the elections in a more or NEW CONSTRUCTION and REPAIR JOBS help in getting together. with some governments Such also is the conclusion of Lloyd K. Garrison, In outlining a 4. What citizen? great United States naval hero was rever an American || HUTCHINGS ECONOMY | MARKET outstanding expert in labor relations. money supply and the rise in total money income . bl ; i . A e i ¢ r m f lasting labor peace in the, New York payments to more than double the pre-war level Pres- | &8 radical manner was, in our Who is considered the best-loved Scottish poet? | v FREE ESTIMATE § prograin for laskii . y B | opinion, to plant in the neutral ANSWERS | | Choice Meats At Al Times Times, he says that the time is ripe for one morc sures for further price rises are present, and wil| = = ' 0 R e 7 » A | : Phone Douglas 192 : Whe S mds js. | continue so long as this large volume of money supply press some sensational news dis 1. To engrave is to cut into the surface in sunken patterns; to! | Located in George Bros. Store forward ste thip. f1eid. Wiliws be pecomibends Js, | e aistarding 3 Y SUPPLY |\ iminatory to Roosevelt, and the emposs is to raise in relief from the surfac | PHONES 553—92 95 i in effect, an agreement to agree. 1:1::3:?; (;"xl::{L:{hm[hpgc};llml 1(;1:[15&5(‘ mlmmm :;;]])]):‘\' Saetiaraisn i e & qumg. e relief from the surface. | NES 553— Th Al k l ; J ro! e pdera and can only be| i 1 < a soda. The desirability o7 collective bargaining iS MO |reversed if a large budgetary surplus takes place, | Pl there was a ‘secret agreement 3. Ruminants e flaskan Hole Jonger seriously disputed. There is a growing under- There is little likelihood that this extra money supply, |2¢tWecn Stalin and RU?".WC"'.,A'_' 4. John Paul Jones. | {The Charles W. Carter Newly Renovated Rooms ' standing of the relationship between wages, produc- | which is reflected in the large accumulation of liquid | AttemPt was made to place such a 5. Robert Burns (1759-96 | ¢ bl g . con- | assets by & ey o & " % I story both in Sweden and Switze Lt obert Burns 59-96) . at Reasonable Rates tion, prices and long-range security. Respect for con- | assets by businesses and individuals, will be retired, il S A ortuar = . 3 b tland, but without success. The story e -1 tracts has grown to the point where the majority of since the required budgetary surpluses are still remote {aid 'a”t”_ g :mL{ll Swedish i Fourth and Franklin Sts PHONE SINGLE O disputes arise only in connection with the drafting| The achievement of some designated relationship |y SPPEY B SANG FEE) HEC P | B n Bta. of new agreements o the renewsl of old ones. between current supplies and, the pre-war total would | oo e g 2 58 1 REEE I 00 JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. J e imise this trouble zone—the one in which | b€ @ more meaningful criteriow of decontrol than that | fio*? : gk ; g, VANITY BEAUTY B 't ot Mhely b coliingte | RDiOITON] by ORA'When'rocupbion and dnvenidriesi| S0 UL £ R0 SR B S0 0 FLUMBING—HEARING—OIL BURNERS—SNERT MEPAL | SALON :“m(.n“ e ommsen a mational charter of prin- | 07 @AY produce exceed the pre-var level an effective 1 g bbenton, Bimselt) 't:_yl(m p:\e WELDING . {| Card Beverage Co. X sarrison pr 5 “a_nations barrier is established against runaway prices. And it i 2 0 : . Wholesale 805 10th St. OgeRee iniiciog ciples which the government itself might PIo- is only runaway price increases which should be the }oMi fhe re-election of fioosevels PHONE 787 Third and Franklin || mulgate” This would not be enforceable in the concern of OPA rather than the prevention of price | 1944 was the folkdom idea. We s _J | | PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager courts, but it would make it easier for the two sides rises per se. The Washingion Merry-Go-Round (Continuea yrom Page One) bentrop stated, and I believe that be was quoting Hitler, that if the United States would go to war it would be only with Roosevelt. “Dieckhotf (ex-Ambassador Washington) had this comment: ‘Ribbentrop always had the idea ihat the Foreign Office should try to thought that anybody would be better than Roosevelt.’ “In the 1940 electons the Nazis had a scheme to get John L. Lewis, the lahor leader, to come out against the re-election of President Roosevelt. This scheme will be re- lated in a later section of this re- fispine - ”‘\l ]:]”'_“_ n \‘\"r";“‘ to influence the election againsi| port. 1640 that John L, Lewls was com- {Roosevelt. He even had the same Ing “u; Aiu;h* flfil»“l*“”] “I*PM'_ idea in 1944, which was more fool- “NAZI ATTEMPTS TO PREVENT Novem ‘1’ gloction, ,‘“\‘;‘k‘{;“_ ish than it was in 1940. In the RE-ELECTION OF ROOSE- "“:'1 S0k "‘“("l“ l““ BOY: % Foreign Office we did not particu- VELT IN 1944” Qi 5 nniha Ag e larly like Willkie either but we| * az re regard for 4—James D. Mooney, vice presi- € The Nazis had more regard for dent of General Motors, had told Nazi agent Westrick that he would dcsatid try to sell Roosevelt on getting C dP i : : A LiL along with Germany—even after rosswor uzzie R ElA Hitler had taken France, Norway, A 3 NIN| Be. am and Holland ACROSS 28. Mistreat R S TIE| =% S 1. Belonging to 31, For example: Father Coughlin wrcte a let- that woman i ter to the German Consul in De- sculine namegs Refugal Fl L FIE| troit asking German support for Hewing tool Conducted : R : [JEd Jughlin® i i Harden Bitter vetch A 3 Coughlin’s war against the Jews R share A Al s Y& and Roosevelt. An emissary of gl female sheep |P| O[V|E|R| Coughlin's Leo T. Reardon, also '5 Nerveus Coraaitiialiclo LE K[1[R]T twitching Woods wgnt to Berlin and made a similar| 16 Second highest 43. Type ETIER No. Ameri- measure proposal to Ribbentrop can mountain 44. Committed Lild RIEILIEINT] 6-—Carl Byoir, the well-known 17 Condensed == ' theft 1[N E L[o[o New York public relations man, Muckire & Rl S E0 c AlD|D| collected over $100,000 irom the 18 Snlww lumten- e lfly water F|O! TISEEYIES fonally al Nazis for publicity work, using ll{r 20. Issued in In- 50. Mectal-beuring Solution of Saturday's Puzzle German Railroad Information Of- stallments compouna cadow Withdraw 60 53 Hosisens fice as a front candin Proprietors I,i (<“;;( L",“['lw These are only a few of the , pn ltgbber tree ¢ 85, Wild animas startling highlights of Hit- the ocean EEnglish river 62 DOWN desperate gamble to keep Am- erica neutral, If he had succeeded, if the United States had not gone to the aid of England after the fall of France, the story of Head coverings ssage out emember Son of Seth Haul Rub out Army officer war’'s outcome might have been e Deride tir different R tnaien = tent PLOT TO DEFEAT ROOSEVELT L S Here are some of the verbatim . Fauals quotes from the section of the sup- Bann, pressed report dealing with Nazi point attempts to influence Ame EYgh. fiimy elections \I('I‘u]d o i slons “Concerning the 1940 elections s Paul K. Schmidt (of the Nazi Em- votes Private detec- bassy in Washington) told us tives ‘Both Ribbentrop and Hitler were of the opinion that any Presiden would be better than Roosevelt v The Embassy was requested, and . Pointed did furnish, extensive reports with oy regard to Willkie. The re ed that Willkie would friendly to Germany, but wc not be capable of as sweeping pol- itical decisions as Roosev Rib- not | Great hurry amb's pen Search . Danish fiord | wanted to address ‘ourselves to the | difierent nationality groups in Am- erica, such as the Polish groups, | the Irish, the Czechoslovakians, the Hungarians, the Greeks, the Ital- ians, and even the Germans. We received reports about this propa- ganda. The reports came via South | America. We received special re- | ports from our men and then there | were two or three radio transmit- MOTOR REBUILD and MARINE SERVICE Machine Work — Welding ENGINE REBUILDING—HARDWARE 1012 West 10th Street PHONE 863 | ters. T remember, for instance, we got reports about the results with- {in the Polish minority. I remember | especialy a report about the Polish {group.’” | (Note—Another column on Hit- {ler's efforts to sway the American | people will follow shortly.) | (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC, 1946) - - - EASTERN STARS | Juneau Chapter No. 7, Tuesday, October 22, at 8 o'clock. Initiation. ALICE BROWN, Sec. adv. For& / especially Kayser is creating ric gloves, hosiery, Y. underthings, lingerie. Kivsep HOSIERY « UNDERTHINGS + GLOVES AND CONCRETE For Every Purpose JUST PHONE y 182 or ! 039-2 Long, 2 Short —DELIVERY WILL BEGIN WITHIN A FEW MINUTES . Juneau Ready-Mix . Concrete, Ine. SSEssSssssssssseraeoseeaassessinsssseasssasssesean e for MIXERS or SODA POP Open Evenings Phone 318 B e ALASKA ELECTRONICS Sales and Service BOX 2165 3 PHONE 62 Hallicrafters . . Admiral . . Bendix and Sentinel Radios EXPERT REPAIRS ON ANY RADIO EQUIPMENT MOTORSHIP ESTEBETH tee HAINES ** SKAGWAY “~ MONDAY 10 P.ML Leaves for SITKA and Wayporis every Wednesday 6 P.M. PASSENGERS, FREIGHT and MAIL “BLOOD ON THE SUN" CAPITOL THEATRE HARVEY STARLING Federal Tax—12¢ per Person and receive TWO TICKETS to see: 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 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! 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 TheB.M * Behrends Bank ' Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS Sap

Other pages from this issue: