Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR Duil y Unsl.a Empire Suaday b7 the PA! Aisska - Vice-President Editor and Manager 1 S Manaer + Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Doulas for 150 per month; Six months, $8.00; one year, §15.00 ollowing rates s, in advance, $7.50; if they will promptly notity arity in the delivery \u\uu R OF \~~m|\nn PRESS s sively entitled to the use for hes credited ® it or not other 1411 ka Newspapers, INDIVIDUAL SAVINGS that The Institu of Life Insurance reports during the t Wf of 1946 accumulated savings of individuals rose to a new high level. As of June, the ageregate savings held in the form of United States life insurance, savings accounts and savings and loan jations were almost $150,000,- 000,000. Exclusive of life insurance, th $107,000,000,000. These are highly liquid savings which convertible into cash. Additional savings are found in the large volume of currency in cir- culation, which now is approximately $28,600,000,000. During the first half of this year the total volume of savings was reported to have increased by $6,000,- 000,000 This increase is particularly interesting in light of the many statements made t spring that as a result of the strikes workers were “using up their Savings Bonds, assc are readily savings.” The fact is that savings drawn upon by workers are transferred to other persons in the country The figures cited above indicate that, on balance, even though Series E Bond redemptions have exceeded sales, the types of savings which workers hold increased during the period of widespread strikes. The volume of savings will remain at record high levels so long as the factors which led to their creation are not reversed. These savings reflect the failure of the Government to pay for the war out of current income. The volume of savings can be reduced only if the Government obtains a budgetary surplus which it uses to retire part of its cutstanding debt. Until that date arrives, although transfer of savings among individuals will take place, no significant reduction in the total amount is to be expected Can Cancers Be “Dissolved”? New York Times) It has been known for many years that malignant - President ‘ y were around v [ tumors occasionally disappear. Usually the disappear- ;:muv is associated with such bacterial infections as { erysipelas, pyemia (“blood poisoning”), typhoid, pneu- | monia and others. On the assumption that the bac- teria were the cause of the effect physicians here and abroad began to experiment with single cultures and also with mixtures and filtrz The late Dr. William B. Coley was an American le type. He had his counterparts in France, and Germany. Physicians were not impresed by the case records of reported cures Now comes a report from Moscow that Nina [Klyueva and her husband, Gregory Roskin, |ceeded in “dissolving” cancers with a prer c named KR, the “K 1g for Klyueva and the ‘R” for Roskin. This out to be a bacteria (n\m prepared from trypanasoma cruzzi, which is arried by insects and which is deadly to man and In the light of the record, the Russian investi- aving discovered anything new in have merely added another bacterial toxin to a fairly long list. It be that theirs nore effective, as the account of Klyueva’s success with a large percentage of 13,000 cancerous mice seems i0 indicate. So many cancer cures have been heralded in the last fifty years that medical men will receive the news from Moscow with enthusiasm present the most that can be said of KR is that it | holds out no more and no less promise than does colchicine (a remedy f gout ge doses) and about fifty other beast ! principle, not which is fatal in preparations All this does not work done literature on the in The mean that worth confirming. bacterial infections in cancer is too ignored. Though Dr. Coley died a others have followed his clues here from being closed, the case for the bacterial toxins is reopened. That the reports from Russia will not be ignored may be assumed | from the news that the Russians have promised to send some KR to this country for experimental pur- poses. Until a sufficient number of American clinicians have tested KR and published their findings judgment must be deferred is not effect of striking to be frustrated man, and abroad. So far Russia Thirty-Hour Week (Washington Post) Nonfarm employment is at peacetime high levels and the volume of unemployment down to two million a figure so low as to indicate that the country is "for all practical purposes on a full-employment bas In some lines, indeed, labor sho; constitute a brake on expansion of output. Unde uch conditions with consumers clamoring for more goods and zooming prices registering the intensity of their unsatisfied demands, the AFL at its annual convention actually pledged itself to work for the establishment of a 30- hour week It is impossible to reconcile this objective President Green's recent appeal to workers to “stab- ilize their wage dollars by helping to increase the volume of production which can wipe out scarcities and the danger of runaway inflation.” For the amount of goods that can be produced at any given time depends not only upon the efficiency of the individual worker but also upon time worked. To be sure, cessively long hours resulting in undue fatigue may reduce rather than increase output. But with a work week of 40 hours or less, there is slight danger of that happening. Over a long pericd of time it might be possible to cut the working week to 30 hours or less and still maintain production at the levels now tainable by working 40 hours. But done by introducing labor-savings with devices on an ex- tensive scale and then forfeiting the advantages of ‘ golng to continue to live with him. 2 the potential increase in labor’s productivity by letting machines lie idle, for lack of operators. ! For a long time to come, certainly, leisure for workers can only mean fewer services for the public to enjoy—hence lower wages. More leisure bought at such a price socn cease to be regarded as a boon additional goods and real H | Jr. to recognize a labor union with the Government, he is nego- The Washlnglon after Rockefeller had proclaimed tiating with loaded dice and a M G R d that the House of Rockefeller cold deck. One of his best friends, e"y- 0' oun | would never bargain with wage- War Reconverter John Steelman, —_— | earners This was in the pioneer sits at the right hand of the Presi- (Comtinuea wom Page Onej | days, when Wall Street settled its dent. So at the end of every coal — ~ labor troubles with armed Killers. crisis, according to some Cabinet §25,000 salary and sports & SWank | During this dispute, Lawson was members, beaming John Steelman ier in research of this | England At | ter ob- | that could only be | B B i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE’JUNhAU ALASKA SATURDAY,- NOVEMBER 16, I946 NOVEMBER 16, 1926 Twenty new talesmen were drawn for the grand jury and included \\\\ ”I/ . . ® NOVEMBER 16 c[’JMk Fargher, Tol McMullen, Mrs. A. Van Maverr, H. M. Porter and, ° sorge A. Getchell ® | Cash Cole, ° red W. Orme o s . Nedford Zenger o Steamers Princess Mary and Alameda were due from the south and 2 Mrs. Alvin Anderson ! ihe Yukon was due southbound. Seven days mail was dué from the ® Armene J. Stenger . scuth. ° C. J. Bergstrom . ° Mrs. Le Palmer 3 CUSAN T 0 v b S S o w3 el . Jackie Cobright ol Mrs. Tom McCartney and Mrs. H. V. Sully gave a shower honormqi s Coude Nistets o | Migs Marion Knight who was soon to be married. ! . % T VT | NOVEMBER 17 i Priscilla Dean was featured in “A Cafe in Cairo” at the Palace and | ° Edward Jahnke ° 1 Hammerstein was at the Ccliseum in “Broadway Gold.” | e L. Satre » - _— B Adelaide E Holbrook = The Parent-Teacher Association was holding a food sale at the| ° Everett Judson ° tary Grocery { ° Mrs. Robert R. Brown ° Jhided . r_;i"{'}"‘i‘f g‘u’b”mm : The Home Grocers on Willoughby Avenue, operated s ° H. H. Foss o | by Walter Hellon, had been purchased by Mrs. L. B. Burford and son | . Gail o | Ben | e o 0 0 0 s 8 0 0 0 o — - > Weather report: High, 43; low, 41; cloudy. e e el e e Smuls Gives { Daily Lessons in English %% 1. corpon | NS e “A man named Wilson” is preferable. {of Wilson.” s e e 1:1.-»» i “lfingTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Elgin (Tllinois). Prenownce el-jin, not ;:::(M ,“,',7‘;““1 J‘;:mhc‘]:;::f:‘b OFTEN MISSPELLED: Nineteen; NINE. Ninth; no E | told the United Nations flatly to- SYNONYMS: Wicked, sinful, evil, unholy, ungedly, unrighteous,! day that he was prepared to take | iniquitous. | over mandated Southwest Africa by| WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is you Let us unilateral action if the General increase your vocabulary by mastering cne word each day. Today's word: Assembly refused to approve his| CALLIGRAPHY; beautiful penmanship; also, penmanship in general proposal for its annexation. ! (Pronounce ka-lig-ra-fi, first A as in AT unstressed, both I's as in IT, Challenging Russla’s assertlon "o, ,;,q A as in ASK unstressed, accent first syllable) that the U. N. charter compels the placing of all former League of Na- tions mandates under the proposed I f MODERN ETIQUETTE % pepra 1os ; | trusteeship system, the 76-year-old South African leader declared: “If the Assembly does not act »_--,-,-m,,,,,,,,,,,_.‘ A ji:\‘):izt'x‘».\:)l:(;.f “;V‘K,f;;;::‘l,?“;;][}' fi'}'fl’n Q. When four men, accompanied by four women, enter a restaurant, South Africa, has mo other alter- Should they enter by couples? native but to continue to adminis- A. No; the four women should follow the head waiter, the four the territory as an integral men following last. part of the Union of South Africa.” Q. When should the presiding officer at a banquet call on the most He spoke as the trusteeship battle important speaker of the evening? flared again, with a British declar- A. The most important speaker should be called last, and is given ation disputing Russ contention (1. most time that Palestine and all other League Q. How much sheuld. be mandates must be placed under U.' .o ; j given to the clergyman who officiates at a N. tru ~tm‘<ifll’-‘-4_ A. There is no sct fee; the groom gives according to his means. FAMILY AFFAIR , 00K and LEARN % o somoon CHICAGO. Nov. 16—Harcld Bar- ‘-.‘““_ 8 S L nard was divorced by his wife Ruth sterday but his mother-in-law is 1. How many letters are there in the Hawaiian alphabet? What fleet did Nelson annihilate at Trafalgar? Mrs. Barnard’s mother, Mrs. 3. What is the tallest monument in the world? :Ijucxf Clement, told Superior Judge 4. What animal, even if blindfclded and dropped from any pesition, fi-‘_cb-“_i‘i‘fil";“:"“;m’fi‘x‘\‘_l:‘f"'“dffim:; will always land on its feet? 2 5. What is the meaning of the expressicn, “to die intestate”? would | than with her daughter, and take care of the three Barnard children Mrs. Barnard, who won the div- orce on charges of desertion, had asked that custody of the children ANSWERS: 1. Twelve letters. 2. The Napoleonic fleet. 3. Washington Monument, Washington, D. C, standing 555 feet be given her mother. Barnard, a high. bus driver in Hammond, Ind., ' . The cat, | agreed to pay Mrs. Clement $20 5. To die without having made a will. a week. | —.r - SHANGHAI, Nov. 16 — Wolfgang Schenke, former German news- =zaszeesd) chauffeure limousine !indicted on a trumped-up charge stands with outstretched arms, paperman, and five other Nazis ac- ll-‘wls VS, USA of murder, and was defended by ready to welcome Lewis with a fa- cused of helping Japan wage war Today John L. Lewis, in the Sen. Ed Costigan of Colorado | vorable contract x‘\zz?ms(c‘l l::;: Alhos aIte_rtGErma\nyi ful flush of power and Elory, In the very middle of the trial, | OUer 1abor leaders claim that SUrienderse Weve SRl il e i Gamanding ' that ithe AmEIoRD Lewss fived Tawson from the Dn.|Sictiman never has been kmnown|2o 5 T i e AR ForE hain by ane - CIEae s s om_ the to let Lewls down. Once John L.| The tribunal’ruled the’ prosecu- very i people, faced with a cold WINter jon_an act which many miners in- Y : : s 3o i Esisniaee s i 2 € any nel ets his dispute to the Wk tion had failed to prove a case and few coal reserves, knuckle un- terpreted as Lewls ' deal with 8% spute. 1o - the hite : i P“'o <% P! as a Lewis dea ith! rse. he can always coént on against the six, but ordered the p“se der. Wall Streer. Immediately Lawson ,. = . S : e triel to proceed against 21 other —— Lewis may get what he wants this pecame a hero. He became even his friend. A_nfl Steelman is fin- de\" dnats S g | Juslr PHONE time—tharks to his friend JObN more of a hero when Lewis would ned all Lewis has to do is plck ] 3 Bisetnan in. the White House.(BUE Ak 1ot him: 6o, bag)'ito, work. with | LE: 245 dnatbies Spi6 dn the Jpubiic NOTICE i sooner or later the showdown has u pick and shovel. Fc was even eye, and strut home. Outstanding accounts due the 182 "I H got to come. A continued SUITEN- .arred gas common laborer. (Note—Another Drew Pearson'San Francisco Bakery are to be der to the insatiable greed of One For his treatent of Laswson. Lewis column on John L. Lewis, most paid at the purity Bakery (suc- 039-2 Long 2 Shori man is something the American won the undying hatred of “Moth. POWerful figure in public life, will|cessor to San Francisco) or to P. [l & people will not long tolerate er Jones” the "grand old lady of | follow shortly) O. Box 21. Messerschmidt Bros. ||} AND In order that they may Know jahor to whom Rockefeller even- | (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) | 2 —DELIVERY WILL BEGIN the man with whom they even- .yajly apologized for his ruthless WEITHIN: AW MINDTES tually must come to grips, here iS jreaiment of Colorado labor. i a quick look at the life of the pyen as late as 1930, Mother labor leader about whom ¥ Jones, then 100 years old, gave }ir““ oaice “;‘“1 "”“ H $1,000 o1 her meagre funds to the ACROSS 21. Movements of Al-l~' J"I‘ L. Lewis anti-Lewis campaign inside the 1. Top cards , the sea most powerful man in - United Mine Workers. Her last' 5. Luzon native 35 Cheeritg —m unless I get there first” public words were: “I only hope I| % 39 Huge mythi- JUNEAU| | CONC“E“ have the id may live long enough to see John' 13 cal bird LXLLXR LS Ex : When a coal miner dared speak| 18 Hostelry 43. Ancient Roman S ever the oui against Lewis in union meet- 17 &lack 4 paonials) (7] * | ek CHis jngs i those days, his remarks 20 45, Spec A : | :'!“’v n expunged from the minutes, 37 Herms pirtn AL e c ! = | as nd & ang locals were ordered to expel 1. Vibatlontess 66, Den. . iyl T s | A R R o 1 N ELLIS AIR LINES | any calouses digging coal of having their charters revoked. 32 57 tmne of corn | R it S e L L, B BB ssuen o vesrsars ewcee || DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIRAN | of Lf“'fi however, ’_“* life ":-“‘* Bill Green a revoked thé! moon's 5. English river DOwWN 7 2 | s e wory Do e sodally Tevoked (e B Fhkary ; ‘o via Pefershurg and Wrangell in Iowa, never atter chool be- 1 1 36. American 61. Give oft 1 Sunken fences 2 ¥ " S e 0 expe 1ii-Lewisites, n list fun 2 Ready 0 it 3 H yond the seventh grade, Lewis ran e e EaNpaa bk dd 680, (FRONEY. With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and || ting society, managed 8 ginnine his budding Brown Shirt 5 9 o steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle el deary wandered around the movement; so Lewis could not FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE €12 i country doing odd jobs, ICAINE have adopted his tactics from him i some coal mining. But chiefly he whether Hitler, in turn, learned o RN b AR concentrated on public speaking, from Lewis is Hitler's story and before long had talked himself i3 > gm,‘ da Mm( u?‘f’« 3 job with the LEWIS' WHITE HOUSE FRIEND NELL MC‘:L“SKEY nite ine Workers One vear after the last war— African coll oy Thereafter he became a statis- Noy. A%k - WP 19. Obliterates . us a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA ! Nov. 1, 1919—John L. Lewis pulled 2. Ol musical | > ficlan for the Union, joined the g strike somewhat similar to his sl | EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. inner cligue of bureaucrats inside tueties after this w ust as 2. Month Present this coupon to the box office of the ’ ) S war Jui as the 24. Greek phy- union headquarters v.l rose ) nation was trying to pull itself lasopher power along with Bill Green as 4 pg & ‘heasetine bosls. Tewia A CAP"'UL THEATRE Voodhs;)chkm and wire-puller with- ya 400,000 milners ont ‘of the m the miner’s bureaucracy L vy Fri § Lt i and receive TWO TICKETS to see: LEWIS' HITLERIAN METHODS But Woodrow Wilson acted with i " " Up unt'i that time there had iorthright decision. Calling it an i eal o : Ipiressiv been a cortain amount of de “unjustifiable” and . movemanta THE BRIGHTON STRANGLER cratic freedom inside the Union. strike, Wilson secured an injunc- S Rrsac Federal Tax—12¢ per Person Lewis was not immediately the tion against the miners, whereupon @ fron-fisted ruler he is today. His the blustering miners’ boss backed e e PHONE 14__THE ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. first ruthless tactics were tried down " orefix (;:éolma::i))mul; T‘x‘:ui“ 'uf ‘Lox; i We )m,: nl nzm (;m ‘(..y(\jnnv 1§ Gentury omnt and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and 3 neiden 1early he declared and ordered his E A JRN Y 7 vi 1i wrecked him. hen Dok 10 mork 0 Relieve RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. Lawson was the first labor lead- Today, however, Lewis knows that WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! er to force John D. Rockefeller when he goes into a showdown DR.E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 356 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 56 P. M. James C. Cooper, CPA BUSINESS COUNSELOR Specializing in Corporation—Municipal and Trust Accounts 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 Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Mausical Instruments and Supplier Phorie 206 Second and Seward HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burne: Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. “The Store for Men” SABINS Front St.—Triangle Bldg. Warfield's Drug Store Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Meats At All Times ted in George Bros. Storé PHONES 553—92—95 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 L Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP 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; LEIVERS, Secretary. Silver Bow Lodge @No. A 2, LO.OF, Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M,, I. O. O. F. HALL, James W, Visiting Brothers Welcome GEORGE JORGENSON, Noble Grand; H. V. CALLOW, Secretary B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome, E. C. REYNOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary ——— 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 202 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt Douglas Boat Shop NEW CONSTRUCTION and REPAIR JOBS FREE ESTIMATE Phone Douglas 192 The Alaskan Hotel ewly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O ANITY BEAUTY SALON Cooper Building ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Evenings Phone 318 SMITH HEATING and APPLIANCE co. FORMERLY SMITH OIL BURNER SERVICE 0il Burners — Plumbing — Heating DAY PHONE—476 NIGHT PEONE—BLACK 1791 EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT ~ OPTOMETRIST PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS Second and Franklin Juneau Everything in Sporting Goods There is no substitute for newspaper advertising! JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL WELDING PHONE 787 Third and Franklin 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 * . The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS Y