Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR o Published y evening except S ¥ ZENGER . s s . Business Manager _ 3 > >vEMBER 21 ° e s political jobs in Alaska now held by Democrats whicl | J Ay i OIS B SR ‘,;’,‘L‘:‘R;’,‘,T’,‘,‘,r‘,,“.};ss"‘"“" Class MAter. | win be fair game for the incoming’ Republicans. Re- | Mis. A B . Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.30 per months | ports say the wages for these jobs range from $720 ¢ | Fred 3. Gilman % six months, SK.00; one year, §1580 s g . Tre 3 2 il. postage paid, at the following rates " vear up to $5,400. The > Ethel Naish ° v T Sl R O e 4180 y00med because of the sh > i Hermle . confer @ favor it they will promptiy notify are going to have trouble finding party 1 Rossella Furness . e of any failure or irregularity in the delivery | o will take the jobs at those orice ’ ella Smith 4 News Office, 602; ’ Mis. Ruth,Gaylor ° Business OF ASSOCIATED news dis s paper und also the 1 Avenue Blde., Seattle, Wash. Dails: ;Jlaska Empire PIRE PRINTING COMPANY sively entitled to the use otehes credited o it ATIONAL “LPRFQENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 ——————— . e e Washington is concerned, officials a -~ kN aren't interested in whether Alaskans starve o Jeath | 2= == | B = unday by the or not. R ated pleas for ta have gone to = o~ v the high powers in the nation's capital. The Gov- au, Alaska - President ' ernor of A a nas been there for a week trying tc Dby 4 some action. Main interest in Alaska fi'om Wa ‘Editor and Manager Managing Editor ington now seems to be that there are 400 appointive ( | Office, 374 | > e helma Singer PRESS | r i or not othe local news publish (New York Times) Nearly a century ago Lord Kelvin suggested that | any mechanical refrigerator could be reversed it IS Brlde 0} operation and that in th's way the heat in air. | in ccld water could be extracted and used to warm ¢ house in winter. Engineers did virtua lly nothing witk the “heat pumy -¢ yele refrigeratc A. L. Zenger, Jr. was called. Now comes t.ancoga Electri Ima Singer, daughter of Power Board with th nnouncemeny. that it will us Singer of Los Angeles, Calif., the principle to heat five experimental houses witi | 1. Akt Jrat ahe oF nothing but well water which has a temperature ¢ Mrs, Altred Zohger. 8 about 58 degrees F. loneer residents of this city, were To an engineek there is nothing paradoxical in @' | njteq in marriage by the Rev. G this. Every electric kitchen refrigerator can eithe | jorhert Hillerman in a charming heat or cool. Within a coil is a liquid with a 1ov | cremony at 8:30 o'clock last night boiling point. As it evaporates and expands it absorb | n the Resurrection Lutheran heat from its surroundings—air, mcat, milk, butte | shurch An electrically driven compressor squeezes the gas bac' |~ The bride, given in mar by |into a liquid, and in so doing heats it. Save the heat! ir George Jorgenson, a life-long given off in the precess of coolir and send i'| yiend of the bridegroom’s fami = . A through the house, and all the rooms can be warmed | ore a dr ker sult’ of brov STILL NO ED The efficiency of such a system is far greater th weed, with brown accessories. Her FEECHS that of any steam radiator. Use the heat now gen- | orsage was of Tal an roses with Hopes for settlement this week of the maritime erated and wasted in a re rator u‘xrlr. lhlv 1«;,:51 4])1 th | tephanotis. strike now running in its third month are dimmed l;;cnlp;m:; ((‘nzu: 1y will be mo.re wrmly distribuf Miss Lorra inger, s of “ " as ~Or+ rough the yea he bride, wor ray tweed dress- vith t ep v ! has a score , : i 418 report LR se _Ch"k“i “n::m : 5 . ¥ The rising demand for electric cutrent has forcec’ naker suit, with |,1mk essories, that must be settled before the ships begin ‘0 MOVe. |11 o Chattanooga Electric Power Board to conside | nd had a corsage of However, the big hurdle is gleared with agree- gejyins old principle seriously. The Board's experi- | osebuds ments reached between the operators and the 1ong- | ment will be watched by every central station com The best man was Nedford Zeng- choremen and engineers. Deck officers are still pick- | pany and every municipality. If #t succeeds, as il |.r and the ushers were Harold but it is probable that these men will vote to | should, home air-conditioning ought to boom. More- | ze; » and Willlam Jorgenson. t the operators’ offer. over, the principle ought to wark just as well, thoug! Preceding the cersmony, Miss checkers how many men are needed on a par ably go out on strike—or some oth haven’t heard about The Washingion Merry-Go-Round According to the operators, the dispute with the | not with equal efficiency, in the /mrgc 15 well | Jois Hared sang ccom- involves the right of the operator to designate in the tropics. iR faok, the Eeusgiant drew up SOM | panjed by Mrs. Katherine Alexander fisiar o grandiose schemes to make use of the heat in Arctic | ¢ the organ. The Wedding March e water, and Georges Claude, a French engincer, actually | nq Recessional were played by After that one is settled the kibitzers will prob-|4y50e"s steam turbine with heat extructed from deep| gy, Alexander. er union that We | gcean water as cold as that which Chattanooga will| A profusion of white and pastel use. There is heat in everything—even in a block of | chrysanthemums and palms made Meanwhile, it is interesting to note that as far as jce. It is about time that we made more of it {an attractive background for the = | wedding ceremor | United Minc Workers. M i | S !..‘ d The church was well filled with Resson benind ail s was wat MUTI€] 3¢ 10 the many friends of the young the Lewis-Hoover plan simply d ; ouple and family friends. re- rot work. The mine operators, B B d f ception was held in the chmm cupposed to hire union men at e(Ome " eo parlors following the wedding cere- (Conmtinveq yom Page Onej |§750 per day in the profitable mony, nearly 100 guests sign- : & — ! mines, hired non-union men for eon exan ef ed the guest book, which was taken on sidings in the Pennsylvania An- thracite field, filed with barley Anthracite, a glut on the market, or just one reason—factories that nave converted to oil because of| continued boosts in the price of coal. This conversion to oil will increase according to how much the price of coa! goes up. The process toofislow, however, to be the real answer to the coal strike. NATURAL GAS vs. LEWIS When it ccmres to an immediate weapon agairst John L. Lewis, however, U. 8. Government has the boest in the world right in its own hands. It is the two war-built Big Inch and Little Inch pipelines, ccnstructed to carry oil from Texas to the East coast dur- ing th2 submarine peril, and now lying idle for two long years. Several private companies have bid for these pipelines, proposing to bring millions of cubic feet of natural gas now going to waste in Texas to the factories and homes of the industrial East. The pipelines could be converted in thirty days— possibly less. And they constitute the only real weapon the nation has against Lewis. It is the only thing that makes him lose sleep at night. He knows that natural gas brought to the industrial Fast would knock his fat flow of union dues approximately in half. Even more important, he knows that the next time he tried to paralyze the ation, only one-half could b paralyzed. The rest would thrive cn natural gas. Yet the pipelines remain idle. LEWIS AND HERBERT HOOVER Only once in his long years of swaggering across the American stage Lewis faltered in his 5 during the Hoov. ly before Fran mul s pro-labor laws s up, refilled his treasury, and made him the life-and-death dispenser of the black-blood of the industrial t Incidentally, Lewis at fir: dead opposed to the pr Roosevelt and it took a lot of per- suading to hoist him aboard the New Deal bandwagon. Apparently he didn’c recognize what a bonanza he was in for. At that time, also, Lew himself had sold Herbert Hoover a phony economic theory which was partly the reason for the coal miners’ undoing He proposed that the mine op- eraters pay a standard wage of §7.50 per day to all union miners— a wage at that time so high that ureconomic mines could not afford to operate. Lewis, however, argued that these uneconomic mines should close, and the miners employed in them should move on to other in- dustries Hoover, then § ry of Com- merce in the Coclidge cabinet liked the idea and sold it to Cool- In fact, he also tried to sell Coolidge the idea of taking Lewis into his cabinet as Secretary of Labor. At about that time, however, »wis faced serious rebellion from thin, and barely escaped being ousted from union leadership. In ct, his friends in the executive council of the AFL debated drop- ping him in order to prevent fur- per loss of membership in the k Ha Lucht less in both the profitable and un- profitable mines. care of by Mrs. Miss Verdiene charge of the punch bowl and Mrs. The forthcoming marriage of an-| hidir Lewis lost membership by the ., .. e : ; 5 other popular couple in Juneau ree e . fugusnds. Uit d9 ‘_(,'f'pp“d 10 younger set has just been announc- D:I-“"!“ _meilh','"“d““:,m‘.,r“;z\ A mere tr »(- His treasury w ed. Miss Muricl Schad, daughter ‘IIX\,, f(\ll‘l‘nl.f o e IM 0 "{n}f" If‘--b 5 almost bankrupt of G. E. Schad of Concord, Calif., ames Sofoulis T Bert Lybeck and Mrs. A. A. Kiefer The trouble was that he had Nno wi pecome the bride of Leon Alex- ) he.s monopoly weapon to hold over the gnq.. <on of Mrs. Otto Ander: ni‘:lkt‘ was cut by Mrs. George Jor- mine oper rs. They could hire ¢ jineau, im a December wed- genson union or nen-union miners just as ding, they have told friends. Sun-| Mr. and Mrs. Zenger, Jr, | they pleased. This monopoly pro- d;\\"Dccfmb(‘r 16 ™18 The"date Set] to make their home in vision was what the Roosevelt ad- ¢, the affair. Ju n and will be at home at ministration gave him later—des- nfics Schad is at present on the their residence on Kennedy Street pite the fact that Lewls at first office staff of the Territorial Un- “ficr the first of December. | was too stubborn to see what Was employment Compensation Commis- The bride, graduate of UCLA‘J — 1n. Store for Him. sion.¥ coming ' Hare' from her'Hiome 1> 00 the Difice statt of she EHbI 7 in California last March Wellare i Berylie hite hininte xoomy, LEWIS AND FDR | The prospective groom was born ing to Juneau last March e has ! ™1 become one of the most populaf In later years, Lewis has taken a in Juneau, and attended local] ) : e ot o o ol WAL A%s aGHGBIE He.feimow Sfiployed hyliiemibets L the younger pey here I : = oy i The bridegroom is a graduate of the U. S. Engineering Department.| The plan to make their home in, Juneau after their marriage, but| one little detaik still bothers them, they say. To date they have not located an apartment or a housi NRA clause which makes it com- pulsory for an employer to bargain with a union. However, it was not Lewis but Phil Murray who sold this to Roosevelt. In 1932, with the miners in mis- |Juneau High School, and after four |years service with the U. S. Army, eturned here last spring. He employed in the Alaska Native Ser- vice office in the Goldstein Build- ery and the union treasury down to and any tips on an available domi- s i oround $50,000, Lewis refused to go cile would be gr atly appreciated S to Albany to call on Franklin e HOSPITAL NOTES Roosevelt, then Governor of New HERE FROM SEATTLE g York. Having warmly supported St. Ann’s Hosp.ai has admitted , Mrs. J. E. Nelson, Charles Taylor and and Mrs. Jack Santeford for medical at- New arrivals from Seattle check- Barney McCoy. ing in at the Baranof include Os-| Qscar Carlson, car Yeland, William Warner, his friend Herbert Hoover in the past, .Lewis sulked in his Indian- apolis headquarters and let Phil Murray, then vice president of the E. E. Steunk, Bessie Irrgang of tention, and Mrs. Matie Loy and Miners, lead a delegation to Al- sBremerton, Wash., is also at the jJames S. Drake for surgery. Allan bany alone. Roosevelt promised hotel. Casperson, Mrs. Arse Credo and | Murray to put miners' problems e Laby girl, Thomas Maloney and near the top of his work list, and iN VIA PNA Mrs. G. J. Metcalf were discharged. later fulfilled his pledge Arriving in Juneau via Pacific| Government hospital admitted Meanwhil», when Roosevelt visit- Ncrthern Aurlines are Jack R. Mary Ann Brown Juneau and ed TIndianapolis for a campaign Dean, Jerry Roberts, and B. L. dischary Oliver and Lorraine speech, Lewis even refused to ac- Wedge Hawkins of Juneau company Murray-and shake hands | will ! 4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU. ALASKA T e e i e L st B THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1946 to go to Washington for further cenferer by 7 ' MOUNT JUNEAU LGDGE N E 20 Y E A RS A G 0 from ! DB E. H. KASER SECOND and FOURTH . THE EMPIRE. {i DENTIST Monday of each month 1 5‘ 2 BLOMGREN BUILDING | in Scottish Rite Temple » 3 > o Phone 56 | beginning at 7:30 p. m, NOVEMBER 2 . : HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. M. L. MacSPADDEN, in was in New York City conferring with pa # e b itive to establishing a pulp and paper plant in Alaska. From New e p Jheseiri Ja W, | LEIVERS, Secretary. B —— Silver Bow Lodge James C. Cooper, CPA BUSINESS COUNSELOR J. C. Themas, of Sitka, the Thoma : Company Specializing in | . A 2, LO.OF. » LO.O.F, would be establinshed in Jun after the fir in nxf{ Corporation—Municipal and eets each Tues- tand of the Juneau Hard Company on Front Street Trust Accounts day at 8:00 P. M., I. O. O. F. HALL, —_— Visiting Brothers Welcome % A grass fire in Douglas caused a general alarm but wa | GEORGE JORGENSON, Noble controlled before causing serious dam: H Grand; H. V. CALL o . 1 dagiag The Erwin Feed Co. OW, Secretary # : % Z ot i < Office in Case Lot Grocer; The citizenship night school opened at the Alaska Juncau Gold Min- it v ing Ccmpany's boarding house with 25 enrclled | S PHOGE T 7@ B. P. 0. ELKS HAY, GRAIN, COAL ir v Ve " MODERN ETIQUETTE osna ves | —— br all the happiness in the wo aften using? A. Yes, always, with the handle resting on the edge of the plate, never on the ta Q. Shculd a man heold a woman's arm when they are walking together? A. \‘u: the only thing he should do is to offer her his arm. i in 8F i The wedding | Weather report: High, 34 Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpox WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do no s an hour.” AN HOUR is te ln nautical usage, a ve: is going at ten knots is traveling at the rate of ten nautical miles | HOUR. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Luxury. Pronounce luk-shoo-ri, 0O » BCOK, and not lug-shoo-ri 8 ). Beech § , diligent, I V.ORD STUDY lrse a wld three times and it is your rease your vocabulary by mastering one word each, da Today OLATILE; light-hearted; airy; tickle. (“Ekove without esteem latile.”—Johnson hence, D Q. What ide and bridegroom? A. “May you have many, many happy years.” od luck and God bless you.” or spoon alway Q. Should the knife, fork, LOOK and LEARN IZC. GORDON - U - e —s |Warfield's Drug Store Ideal Paint Shop 1. What is the difference between the Fahrenheit and the Centi- | Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) e e NYAL Feuils Btaciiee Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt % 2. Whatt last names ained only four lettqs? - 4 , £ A S as ety ol Rivers HORLUCK’S DANISH 3. Where Is the source of the M bpi River b : e S e LA T icr cnpau || | Douglas Boat Shop S e o : g NEW CONSTRUCTION and ity HUTCHINGS ECONOMY: b s 1. On the Fahrenheit, water freezes at 32 degrees and boils at 212 MARKET es; on the Centigrade, it freez ro and boils at 100. Choice Meats At All Times ERES S LIMATE Polk and Taft. Lake Itasca, 231 in northern Minnesota cubic inches. once in 7,000 cases. Delivered to your job in required quantities—— Ready for your men to pour—at $18.50 per cu. vd., f.o.b. plant. Hauling charge 15¢ per truck mile. Other concrete products will be available soon— Get acquainted with with the Democratic candidate. in- [RIAIR[A[SENF formed of this FDR laughed and IE(plolc HEMA said, “John is still a Republican, I slowERMMC fee 3 E|L|A It was not until after Roosevelt ACROSS E:M Wi\ | D! was elected and Phil Murray made L. Poultry house- product “hotd god AlLIA NE] | a post-election pilgrimage to Lewis’s %l Tricky . siang N|o|S|ES in Springfield, Ill, that the - ““;"’ Deep’hols VIN[GIL[ 1N Foss inally consented to come 12 june bug Not fresh REFERIET e . G . a g 13, Aftersong ian hemp ) W ! hington for a talk about it I birds ANASEIAIA jiners’ problems. 15 Feminine name 40. Iy sECEAGR ' Rocsavelt and Lewis were never 10 Literary alphabetic S EC |G[R| o g b A e composttion characters T|AIN[A[G! mate ‘ms a vas te Painti ™ ble that they should break— -: :: s: :‘5 .nevitable, also, perhaps from" sfs Zewis's make-up, that the break s TIYERME tud fo should come when FDR needed the soles solution of Yesterday's Puzzle aine leader's support the most, y Inquire e b 8 5 S flya FEVORE outhern slate Pronoun Theme 66. Begins when the nation was on the thresh opper Shout 61 lIgnited 57. Compasa point hold of war. Gratings Crusted dish 53 Pathetio DOWN The fact is that John L. Lewis S could never be on intimat: terms l\\(\;wv wich anyone bigger than himself. R The half million dollars he donated to the Democrats from the dues of mine work«rs Lewis considered a grape personal bargaining fund—at least Kind this was indicated by the number Dismounted of times he threw it up to Roose- pabit BL % velt before they broke Sound of a bell Be that as it may, it was not = long after Roosevelt came into o1i- fice that Lewis had his organizers scouring Pennsylvania and West Virginia telling the miners “The President wants you to sign up with the union (Editor's Note — Another Drew point Pearson column on John L. Lewis R will fellow shortly.) (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC, 1946) ki ted WOMEN OF THE MOOSE Will initiate a class Jf candidates, Thursdey eve., Nov. 21st, 8 pm. in the Moose Jodge rooms in Seward Bldg 431-2t, ! ish hyma writer . Jump pm———— et i )| | “The ship's speed was ten are a few suggested phrases to use when congratulating a “I wish both of y 5 be placed on the plate Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. m. Visiting brothers welcome. E. C. REYNOLDS, Exalted Ruler, W. H. BIGGS, Secretary R 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 CoO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a and STORAGE CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 473 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices as ! Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third Alaska Music Supply —Musical Instruments and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward Arthur Pi Uggen, Manager HEINKE GENERAL o REPAIR SHOP Frateuilon Velding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Work 20TH Cbm MEAT GENERAL REPAIR WORK PheiE a0d Juneau'’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 920 W. 12th St. “The Store for Men" SABINS ngle Bldg. FOR Wall Paper Phone Douglas 192 Located in George Bros. Store a1 PHONES 553—92—95 The Charles W. Carter " Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O VANITY BEAUTY SALON Cooper Building ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Evenings Phone 318 Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP SMITH HEATING an:l APPLIANCE Co. FORMERLY SMITIH! OIL BURNER SERVICE 0il Burners — Plumbing — Heating DAY PHONE-—476 NIGHT PHONI —BLAdK 91 EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MAROUARDT OPTOMETRIST Seeond and Franklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS There Is No Substitite for Newspaper Advertising! ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petersburg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and «teaxfigrs for Prince Rupert. Vancouver, and Seattle FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE €12 ERNEST ANDERSON as a paid-up subseriber 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: “ISLE OF THE DEAD” Federal Tax—12¢ per Person PHONE 14__THE ROYAL BLUE CAB (0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Everything ! in Sporting Goods | There is no substitute for newspaner advertising! JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL WELDING Third and Franklin | PHONET787 R 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1946 * The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS