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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska EMPIRE PRINTINC ¢ WILL AR & . Mansger ment of President Truman when he coupled his “1 RIEND 2 5 ing BAOr 1 houncement of the decontrol of meat with a state- | o ¥ _— e — ment that wage controls also would be relaxed. Most | o NOVEMBER 30 ° - SOBSCRIPTIC T Matter. | xpr unions seem to be proceeding cautiously, but|g Roberta Messerschmidt . Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douslas for §1.50 per month; | there are some indications that shortly after the|gq Ralph Mortensen ° _ sl menths $800 ong vesr, BN g election, if not before, there will be a concerted drive | o el MAKL i . 5.00; six ‘aavance. $7.50; by the Congress of Industrial Organizations unions tc | o Rogene Stryker B or if they will promptly, motity | Obtain substantially higher wage rates. s Anthony J. Dithond ¥ 3 of or slarity in the delivery In that direction, of course, lies tl)o'grentns( . Edith L. M. Gustavson . their papers. 7 meonace of uncontrolled intlation. The widespread & y Te Office, 602. Business Office, 374 - ° X ° —————— increases in commodity uf,.\r.v -as, for instance, mea g DECEMBER 1 * MEMBER OF \\-.ufl\ll!: 1v'm~‘~‘w e’ e Hoe make it much more difficult for the average house- o Mrs. George Shaw s R Shat ored e et other- | hold to maintain its living standard, but there are o Wanda D. Nelson Y , dited t 5 S s published | certain brakes upon this phase of intlation. If c.n- o Harry G. Peterson A ere - sumer resistance increases. prices will come down on o Charmine Yakopatz & NATIC NTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 S commodities. The prices :\lso.\vm decrease ® E. L. Olsen & Eurth A t Wash SR the supply becomes abundant. That's due o NEpIEn o Sl g v s 0 b @ 8 8 B e e S T soon, apparently, in the meat market e o But when a strong union in a major industry en- forces a sizable wage increase there is no immediate up again, the price of cars will skyracket. r fewer people will be able to buy, and with demand curtailed JUNEAU MUS'I' HAVE the scarcity and high prices will be pre d in- defir Until, of course, a business recession de- any more and auto workers by the hundieds of thou- sands are forced cnto the WPA—if we can ever efford i | another WPA. The enroliment for night school, In the case of the steel industry, a wage 3ouge operated by the Juneau Public could prove ruinous at ti age of affairs. Indeed. Schools, has not been sufficient to the same thing might be said fo) ny of the grea’ make any class possible. The school basic industri Our economy is rather sholv ri=ht officials are going to hold the final b o e s e 7 -~~~ |now. It can’t stand much more dislocation without a decision until further notice, thereby BUY YOUR EXTRA SAVINGS BOND painful upset and period Of readjustuicil _ allowing people who might be inter- If the vicious cycle is not carried up again on the ested a chance to send in their Empire = - by the L - President ice-President 1 to battle the auto industry for wage boosts of som: nts an hour This is little more than the e won after the protracted tie-up of the industry | during bygone months. | This could well become a genernl pattern of union acticn, especially in view of the tacit encourage- drive for more money, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ——————————————————— — names for night school classes & e st ox Inited States | back of a certed union Fiiih did SR BB ,L“.“,dvb,‘;”:.v there’s no reason we can't achieve something ap- No classes. will be started with Savines Bond? 1In the final bond drive, ll:r oty | e e bl il S o e Loan, a vear ago? Last week? Yesterday? Today? ‘yp qone fo0d supplies quite certainly will bring down no classes have that many enrollees You may be » old horse fraders and |iyo iiice of the market basket before 1947 is very All classes will meet for two hours answer a questic ng a question 7hy bring | olq—unless price levels in industry and pusiiess te.¢ a night, two nights per week, for 12 up the question of gs bonds now?” Or you may spared too much meanwhile. wee Most subjzc offered for have the ansker by pointing to your c ntinued invest- The best thing that could happen, for the sake of this length of time naturally cannct ment in savings bonds on the Payroll Savings Plan | the nation as a whele and for uni-n men be completed. But with that much where you work. Whatever your red s to © be for the dictates of selfishness to be forgotten for for a foundation, serious-minded savings bonds editorial questionnaire, all of us can half a year. Whatever tne UAW oI wil 1 students can go on by themselves. - might achieve in the form of 20 cents more an hour The following classes are offered agree that any s best “buy” you ever made for hold dear. During with your fighting men you with the future Today avings bond you ever bought was the surself and those you the war these bonds linked you as always—they link wouldn’t be worth other wave of strik middle of thi gia. it in the form of the dan es and price increascs would entail nt inflationary vise that is being el Citiz ing, And it's time, too, that somebody gave a thought ic Shortk the vast majority of people who are caught in the Beginnil hip classes, lementary. There was never a time in the history of the sale | twisted first from one side and then the other. Geometry plan i ; J S Treas ¥ e ning, Latin ad of these savings bonds by your United States Treas- A : b g, ~ adv ury Department when it was so urgent to invest Last-Minute Retreat f a Million ;:m; 7, Spanish y - i 2 rench - beginnin 3 This is 2 of year when human 7 : in them. This is the time of } et i nature urges us to buy something extra for ourselves, naticn we h relatives or friends vet to producing enough merc demand. If you as an individual sc uds are cost of living still further up handise and services which ou are hurting yourself, the cther hand, every extra resents a pa self-interest gain Buy bonds every p re extra sa Take It Ea (Cincinnati Enquirer The Executiv Woarkers, CIO, announced its in all contracts which provide for cost handise available here, you will help to force your avings bond today step as well as a personal Board of the United Automobile aven't got around | oo of how la An unidentified resident of Bal t st-minute timidity ancel o 4 ot 10 Beginning Ty nced Typing, Advanced Beginning Shorthand, Algebra— , Latin—begin- ced, Spanish— ivanced, French—ad- g, U, S. History, U. S. Civics The citizenship classes are offered to meet the ,naguiterated Operating with the nom de plume to all foreigners and include ele- cramble for what he rented a post-office bex in Baltimore mentary education subjects and a and then dispatched to a number of persons all over study of U. S. History nd Civics. d. If you spend the United Statcs you really do not jour community. way to cbtain it, hence I am the recipicnts vings bond tcday. When some re $1,000,000. Would addressed envelope is inclesed. following lett r th cipients of the letter turned it over S¢ The ch T ez I would like to own $1,000,000. The simplest wyable in advance much mene to ask for . will be h y to send letters requesting and Thursdays, an to send me $1 until I have date will be as shcn u plezse send me $1. Self- signed up for any students are inter end in their nam h cou is $20, 1d on Mondays d the openinz as enough have cne class. If ed they should to the Superin- to postal officials the Baltimore man apparently be- tendent of Schools, Juneau, Bdk | came a little alarmed and gave up his post-office pox 1271, giving the name of the cla 1. The Baltimore.Sun reports that desired. To date, sizn-up for class and his undertakir ) postal officials ar violated any law tention to reopen f living increases, | in so bold an appr not certain that the letter writer Certainly he could not be accused of using the mails to defraud, for there was no fraud and I 9; ach to a dollar touch. H fhe Washingion Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) you and I realize—what broken contracts will mean in this highly, integrated, highly se nsitized world They know, f instance, that when you broke your contract with the Government, the Government in turn had to break its contract with France ior coal. That means thar to a broken W ter, but, tract, they tor to the growth of Communism in the entire United States. You are the chief American stigator of Communism in Eu and you may be the chief insti tor right here in : United States You are the best friend and colla- borator the Reds have For a cold and shivering plays right into the hands of every Red agitator from Seattle to Saler- 10 France is not the country which will suffer from broken con- tracts, There England which had contracted to get certain goods in pe = world ol from us, especially food. And fin- ally there is Ita Your Govern- ment, John, h: contract with Ttaly to deliver all the coal that country planned to use this winter. Now, that contract is broken. Do you know what that means? Hitler knew what it meant, and all during the war he usec coal w0 whip the people of Italy into line He knew that merely cutting off several thousand coal cars from the Brenner Pass, the Italian people would shiv and TItalian industry would grind to a stop. | To replace that German coal, Italy had a contract with us. Now, it won't be kept. Forgetting any sympathy you or I might have for the Italian people, let's consider what that means to future genera- tions, to your boy and mine. It means that the Italians, who have will suffer this winter. I KnOW oo ‘mogeism and Communism, will something about that, because now be more susceptible to agitat- + brother and his four kids a s Tro ot Rides there, and’ their ration for | In other words, John, you are winter was one ton of coal now helping the people you have year they were hoping to do bet- g "oy Tiee denouncing HOW FASCISM STARTED However, they can buy wood at I was in Ttaly after World War I' $50 a cord. And much moie before Mussolini came into power, pertant are millions of others in and it was the strikes, depression, ance who can’t buy broken contracts and breken prom- who going to say ises, plus a great sense of irustra- States broke its cor >t which finally drove the Ital- important are tl ian people into the arms of Fas- dus W cism finally In your limited walks from the ple now leaning toward ¢ United Mine Workers offices to the tic Russia ¢ \way fror Carlton Hotel, you may not grasp of demccracy jointly the fact that the American people America and France are feeling the same sense of frus- tiation today. They are tired of LEWIS FOMENTS COMMUNISM ) : in jer They are tired of All your John Lewis, you getting up steam icor a long stretch have been the Swc enemy ©Oi of work and then being jerked to Ccoemmunism, 1 look up a sudder stop by stri your speeches ie back in the And while they sympathize with Wilson Administration, and even the fact that the cost of living has then, twenty : years ago, You gone up for miners, they also know were denouncing the Reds just as that it has gone up for 149,000,000 vigorously as you have been since r people, most of whom do not 1 agree with you on this But sowerful unions which can right mow you yourself have be- paralyze the United States until come the greatest single contribu- their ccst-of-living demands are met They also recall that it was you supported by Bill Green and Sen- Taft and Wherry—who yelled loudest for the end of controls on foed, and the end o1 wage stabili- zation. This was all right for you your mighty union is in a posi- 1 to get what it wants. But it is not all right for millions of others who are unorganized No, John, there are some 140,- 000,000 other people living in this country, who, like the young man I just quoted, believe that they also ‘have a contract—a contract to live and work and enjoy the fruits of their toil. And there is no clause in their contract whereby cne man has the right to topple the econo- my of their country like juggler stopping in the middle of his act. You, John Lewis, conspired to | ship oil to Fascist Germany when | ators a Latin and II, Bookke follows: g I 1 istory, No high scheol s 1 Spanish 1; Shorthand 1 ping, 3; U. S 2 Civil Government, 1. tudents will be she was menacing all that we permitted to enroll in night school sod Now you refuse to mine classes. coal for Italy when she is trying - BSOS o live down her Fascism. Once e o o o4 o 0 O may be a mistake, but twice may be treason e Vi 4 I'iivr. TABLE > The Americawn ,-.uple are patient ® — . eople, but I warn that their pa- @ © @ ¢ & o o ¢ o o o o tience some day may reach the koiling point. . DECEMBER 1 . And when that time comes, not © Low tide 0:49 am, 27 feet ® cnly the hard-wo ~ins of labor, ® High tide 7:27 am. 13.0 feet ® but the cherished guarantees by ® Low tide 13:25 p.m. 62 feet ® which you have the right to stand e High tide 19:03 p.m., 126 feet ® up in court and defend yourself ® — . will be swept into one pile and go 2 DECEMBER 2 . up in the same flame which Mus- @ Low tide 1:49 am, 31 feet ® solini lit when he took advantage ® High tide 8 am., 136 feet ® of Italian frustration. ® Low tide 14:40 pm. 52 feet ® If this time ever comes, you, ® High tide 20:28 p.m, 12.6 feet ® John Lewis, will have done more ®¢ ©¢:. & & & o o o ¢ o o o tc fan the flame than ony other = - - man in America | TUXEDOS Once Your Friend, | Size 38, New, Hart Schafner & DREW PEARSON. Marx; 1 Clothcraft. Phone Black (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC 1946) 272, 437-6t. C dP I AATME AU TRl oM 1 TT] AGEEIOIGIRIENILIADIE rosswor uzzie LA GACEMARIE[A ACROSS 4. Stlkworm oRMuIPPER L L Thicken High mountain FILIEIE TIRIY 4 Live of-mowed 47 Eamuel's [SIMT[L/EMS[PIEIARIEID] 2slteh g e HENJIS[TIO[RM YL E oke. 29 Distant; prefix oo E/SPlAIBARS | |GIN 13. Light bout 40. Spikes of wENMALILIEYISIIN \IS) b Bobher tree oy ki ol NA|S|T| 1 [E[RIM | [RIENE 1 Eemi ong" ™ 41. Water vabor e[ [NEMlSNE[E 18. Frequented 45 Traders TIWORKIAINIA KIAREM \ 20. Spanisn 50. Animal enclo- HA[RIPINDIOMIEISIT] | IC griddlecakes _ sure 1INTIOBA MO RIllo[RE L T S T e (NESTIMES[SHY :__sJ iding ] Blush oman goddess 31 Bone a8 32. Capital of 61 ear away 64 Greece 62. Contend I Solution ot Yesterday's Puzzle Cilgue DOWN Withered . Trappings Finish Other . Falls into dls- use . Color Desire me: v Efl . Cuckuolike bird . Sum . Auditors . Presumed . Lanib s pen name . Luwipens | Lurge jur, Gr k letter Protective ditches Sl t=lund Exclamition Canceled . Previous les Warb| Las . Dininsned ually & . Vehicie ou rune ners . Philippine archaic Ireland Require 38, High vointed hill B |~ 20 YEARS AGO from THE EMPIRE e e e e} NOVEMBER 30, 1926 rt, wellkn: TWajy on the Margnita. enger from S The Mooseheart Legicn was this night in Mocse Hall. nce Geddes, owned by at Pacific, Capt. Cla Th cmpany, Mrs. Glenn Oakes, who had been called south because of her mother’s | ng thi After spending some time with her mother at Seilacoom, Washfl a returning passenger on the steamer Yukon arrivi nigk she visited with friends in Seattle and Pertland Weather report: Highest, 25; lowest, 20; light snow. e e 4 e ! Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “No one was tl.\cre but he | in this T2 HIM and ME,” BUT being a sense. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Savor. not as in HAVE. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Connoisseur; two O’s, tw and Say, “but preposition Pronounce the A N’s, and two S's. SYNONYMS: Pale (adjective), pallid, ashen, wan, coiorless, cadaver- B b i 5xtl.xu M. Uggen, Manager WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us! TR Mae o l".'“mmtn“ increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Teday's word: | | oo AT N poMen CENSE (verh); to inflame with anger. “The people are incensed e Seconoand sawnid him.” | 4 et i e, i HIEINKE GENERAL & REPAIR SHOP ROBERTA LEE | MODERN ETIQUETTE Q. Is it obligatory to acknowledge an invitation to a church wed- | ding? 1 A. No, unless the wedding is to be a small one and the invitations | are written by the bride or one of the relatives. Q. What are the most popular refreshments for a children’s party? A, Nothing can take the place in the children’s hearts of ice cream, ke, and candies Always abbreviate the word “doctor.” 1 Certainty, Security, Celerity”? What girl's name has more variations than any other? What is the largest denomination of U. S. currency? 4. By whom was the Salvation Army founded? 5. What is a mosque? ANSWERS: 1. The Post Office Department. 2. Elizabeth; scme of the variations are Bess, Bessy, Beth, Betsy, Betty, Elsie, Libb, Lisa, Lizzy 3. A $10,000 gold certificate. 4. William Booth, in, 1865. A Mohammedan place of worship. 5. —— SMITH HBAi‘ING and APPLIANCE CO. FORMERLY SMITH OIL BURNER SERVICE 0il Burners — Plumbing — Heating DAY PHONE-—476 NIGHT PE L—BLACK 79) wn Schwabacher Hardware Company man, was holding one of their popular card partics | J. B. Car was materially damaged while enroute to Seattle and had been } wed into Petersburg for repairs. Aboard the vessel, besides Capt teddes, were Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Caro and J. B, Burford. jured i | None were | | McCafferty, one of the managing owners of the Model Cafe irbanks, and Miss Pearl Peterson, manager of Gordon's Drygoods e | as in SAVE, | | | | ottt vttt ot | i How should cne address a doctor in the salutation of a letter? What crganization of the Federal Government uses the motto, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1946 | MOUNT U DR. E. H. KASER James C. Cooper, CPA BUSINESS COUNSELOR Specializing in Corporation—Municipal and Trust Accounts Thé Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery PHONE 704 ITAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE B C. '|CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 | High Quality Foods at Mcderate Prices N { ! Phone 711 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ | READY-TO-WEAR Near Third Seward Street Velding, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. “The Store for Men” SABINS -Triangle Bldg Warfield's Drug Store rmerly Guy L. Smith Drugs: NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’'S DANISH ICE CREAM \Alaska Music Supply 7 ’hone 549 {UTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Cheice Meats At All Times ocated in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 ‘ -'IThe Charles W. Carter = Mortuary | Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Newly Card Beverage Co. Vholesale 805 10th St. PIIONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP men Evenings AU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH 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, H Worshipful Master; LEIVERS, Secretary. R Silver Bow Lodge No. A Meets each Tues<: \ay at 8:00 P. M, I, O. O. F. HALL, Visiting Brothers Welcome GEORGE JORGENSON, Noble Grand; H. V. CALLOW, Secretary ;3 B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. REYNOLDS, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary METCALFE SHEET METAL Meating-—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks—Everything in SHEET METAL 90 Willoughby Ave. "The Rexall Store” Yeur Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneaw’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEAT® PHONE 202 FOR Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Fred W. Wend Douglas Boat Shop NEW CONSTRUCTION and REPAIR JOBS FREE ESTIMATE Phone Douglas 192 The Alaskan Hotel Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O VANITY BEAUTY SALON Cooper Building 'LSIE HILDRETH, Manage! Phone 318 James Wi 2, LO.OF, = Ssesssesiis-estoisissestistsssTisessTesssTas.sessIEEE: Your Deposits ARE SAFE BUY AND HOLD UNITED STATES SAVING BONDS i H | yemwiic | DEPOSITS i 1"‘3’?&"‘6‘.’.—5 IN THIS BANK | =T%== | ARE s INSURED First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASKA VMEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION — 1012 West 10th Street MOTOR REBUILD and MARINE SERVICE Machine Work — Welding ENGINE REBUILDING—HARDWARE PHONE 863 EYES EXAMINED OPTOMETRIST Second and Franklin PHONE 505 FOR APPOINTMENTS LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT Sporting Goods SPORT CENTER | WELDING PHONE 787 : =t JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL Third and Franklin GEORGE SCHMIDT 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: "SONG OF TEXAS" 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! * Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL 1891—0ver Half a Century of Bahking—lm The B. M. Behrends SAVINGS