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pA \Gl . FOUR I)ui!_\‘,fl(' Cor the Important legi: Chamber’s conside Central British Col Boards of Trade of of the ive ration President I ts question, public 1 ¥ " Vice-President A Manager fisheries. ‘The Chamber presented Juneau's pr . Mn“n-:’; during the visit of Secretary of the Interior Julit - Krug, and has acted a st and receptionist to many Mat i E Tatter. official visitors and groups throughout the year, addin Delivered by carrier i a3 for S1.50 per monthi (o the enjoyment of their visit to Juneau. Many Jocal By Nowin, problems also received the attention of the Chamb VB L5, = ce. 750 jcluding roads, needed industries and others Subscri { thev will promptly notity s 1 o e aber ihe B © of any failure of irrecularity in the delivers M e foll jor: the ‘Guamben of their papers to the residents of this arca Tele News Office. 602: Business Office. 374 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS vep : te or 1ot other- Value of a Free Press ‘ 4 his B ud also news published L - P York Times) gy YATION Alaska Newspapers, 1411 | Inside Germany there is a problem more difficult to solve than the struggle for food and shelter. It is German of this | who m a contr Transformati f. Ernst —-- | ‘1he the preblem of redirecting the G kind is Prof in a new German magse lover seeing again after the d man mind. Though | Allied Military Government officials do the best they can, that job can never be done by outsiders. It must be done by the German themselves There are, fortunately, Germans who can do the work—the relatively small group of men and women Jwho did not embrace Hi m. They are now work- |ing in schools and colleges, in factories and home in the press and publishing houses. They are trying to determine the causes, not so much of Germany defeat as of her years of darkn and to find scltions which will lead Germany into the light. A irnst of Heidelberg, lectual groping ing Fritz ibution in this int ine, “Die Wandlung,” me on ticle is in effect a paca of 1 war years a ¥ ; ] ©%' Jow, Dr. Dale made emen Juticuu Chamber | Tie Times of London. e greels ;b 42 8 SEEEeRonias ity diave suppliss flown| WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “We had a glorious' time, 40 TetIbers 6B e | s n 1 e “'\‘1‘ =5 b o ("f"““‘,,\"““: fad. arld into ghe Meade River and a|Say, “We had' @ DELIGHTFUL time” GLORIOUS means. illustrious, 0 € 1S 1 the S @ T h o esh @ coming om the outside world 1 5 1 § " o ’m’ i ‘i“‘ s fa s e akes nim | icrmer ANS teacher, Margaret Pan- | grand, noble. “He related many glorious deeds of this hero. Selepildoy it st il e haata L makes WM | jgeo, an Eskimo girl, accepted the OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Cuckoo. Pronounce kook-oo, fi*st OO Chs b H*(l‘l/* that while man, rmans had studied English z : - LD , > = the Chamber’s j;. . ture. traveled in E - | position of teacher at the new las in COOK, second 0O as in TOO, accent first syhiable. riety of subjects— | papers before the war, nevert lack of an ”"“"'l i bl \ OFTEN MISSPELLED: Souvenir Observe the four vowels 5 . Pl i R Dr. Dale said that around 70 peo- 1 betier place to| objective press of their own few of them understoon ving at present in the| SYNONYMS: Doubtful, dusious, ciuivocal, questionable, uncertain, what they read or saw. Miseducated by more than Ying R fitty yeare.of falsé teachings, they inderstood, nothing | Meade River- Mine. site: eugaged | undefermined ted'to the CAA the | of the spirlt of either the lands they studied or their in mining cf coal for use in the, WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us airfield clear of and, above all, knew nothing about the | village at Barrow. Mr. Wilson's|increase our vocabulary by mastering one wo 1 each day. Today's word: o¢ | great .l vitality of England. They therefore recommendaticn for school facilities| SINEW; that which supplies strength or power. (Pronounce sin-u, T as for thie Junoaul 8L Ly Lging prey of Hitler's propaganda in the mine area was based on mc[m SIN, U as in CUBE, accent first syllable. “The bodies of men, amber has worked to For that reason Professor Ernst concludes that what | insistence of the workers \«{w Fej muniticns, and money, may justly be called the sinews of war.”— Sir 1 to lengthen tt 1d | Germany needs most of all is contact with the quested this opportunity for ‘hf. Walter Raleigh : Wonds o e t learn what is : children ‘since ‘the ‘ning is aper=" T TRSR 0 o o bt and other matters of this all- ' )0 o nds. what other pedple are doing and think manently established industry and i They must lcarn to understand and evaluate the people intend to remain there | § MODERN ETIOUETT In civi project during the year did not |meaning of things. And the best medium for tha to raise their familites. i ROBFR']A LEE : P e time. | intelligence and ur nding Professor Ernst con- s { i S Ly e RIS IR INibE o ipe free press of the democracies. For- e o o ® ¢ ¢ € o ® 8!boce oo ST Bt more that of inquiry from people Outside, | tunately, after their long isolati most Germans | ¢ ., Q. In what color and where should monograms be engraved on for n cn Juneau answered. | today suffer from a kind of intellectual claustrophobia | o el - and are as y for n om the outside world £ = wrough the Chamber, Juneau was represented at the | “\‘“ ot ‘-“]( T oK 1~“1.”-‘~ e :‘]1 Bibl e A. They may be engraved in gold, silver, plain white or in colors Convention of the Pacific Northwest Trade Associa- Germany’s educators °' , o1&t the top of the pe he size and shape of the paper determining e Low tide © H pite the fact that some of his ad- Dinuba had a far higher standard % 2 it dered proper to wave a handkerchief as a means of 1 e Was mglo" e High tide ? visers ("u:\"ml it is too early for (;1 living lu«»x:n s Lo% vds a8 . intance or attention? s & ¥ uch action dispesal, schools, park: % . is not cnly h of etiquette, but it should be Me"y Go Round _White House advisers are urging reation, more churches, participa- ¢ o ¢ o ¢ ¢ © o ® o o o forbidden by o germ spreader | s the President to recommend tion in local government, two news- I b AN be e af Alikas s extension CPA emergency - | papers to one. A “A T Ao 2 trcls on tin_crude rubber. Jead and : e oy naf of the other sc 31, The study W recognized by TRE with logs —— - -~ ne ans Com- A economist of great importance, contaet Juneau Lu:x:h(-n the " GbnRestici 3 _CHAFF s was too great. It lay 10,000.000 feet. For further an A C. GORDON Bt when you look \v”’”“ Lilienthal, head of was brov particulars sce Juneau Lumlnf e S LN S 100,000 in" thooshs ) o por At atomic energy ' jim A\;““. i Jumnn Ci - - — | . How often is the design changed on U. S. coins? R ’l”““h‘“‘ power at one- may of I Business Com- Gotham, a nickname of Nrw; 2. How many cubic inches are there in one cubic foot? po ‘ .:,m‘ the cost : coal and ¢ are | migtee xi.’ determined to publish york City, is derived - from the 3. What precious stone ranks next to the diamond in hardness? ].. ...“ ]1 wetica »«x::‘: can be }l;v 1t | name of a tiny village in England. 4. Who was the taller, Washington or Lincoln? | eascnably soon Assistant Post- % A Ak o 5 hat are the two largest tributaries 3 issippi % s Jear 10 master ral Gael Sullivan has [“}"."”r“]; I;"“(‘]‘("‘l‘i)”‘,‘;‘lj’[n:‘m“‘L; NOTICE OF HEARING OF | X‘.\i‘s\tv;;slvm WIRCAEESE Suliaiensof Wip MUEsDMIUE Y y ok been cffered the presidency of Air ' O e % el FIN JCOUN A% : ed Kopplemann, "but 1 think you' gae o0 ey Of Al Agriculture. Top officlals there, Noflc'r"\l';" ‘;‘F;‘:,;;T sl 1. The law states not oftener than once in 25 ve should suzgest a different sort of SRR i et " fearful of offending the big farm 28 i 4 ¢ 2. 1728 cubic inches. ganization formed by the air- - MEISTE S 2. 1728 cubic inches rate cutting. 1 would suggest a yne o (ONT O e ators, held out for weeks. Mur- {hat SELMA IPA]DE“E"STF?'EAL:dJ 3. Sapphire. 20 per cent for the man mak-| jo. " oo S BT Y ant to Ay then had to beat down the op- f\’;““"’"“_““ o) “]" ;‘“f S E1<;L- 4 DA ing undex 5 per cent Morgenthau, will fly to Ger. | Position of Republicans on his own ¢ e Dubmen, s ; "r""““‘l"i l;f_‘ o A e OBl e cut 1or more to I i:“'\‘ ";'((v ’mif ‘\}”‘1 Committee, who did not know much {r\‘f _P|u”"‘”" ”:“‘_"f'(/'mms ‘l‘:i - g e 0 ‘ 9 g that Al s rm‘».df about the study, but had been * "% ’“*"‘]““"“ _“"t‘)“‘;’('i"r“:' e RS T S S LR Iitler an me respects S . on e report be er- SANK DEPOSTES LESS atiflblaat™ crimin ¢ _, should oppose. o Sy i G c co DA rpses ks it o ot U e, e st e conmsoners cour | SMITH HEATING and APPLIANCE (0. I 1€ wires stage ye J a.m. ‘ebr 5, 5 v “When the public has less net in-' Nazi industrialists off ne | i¢ this wee ck A T srsons interest- 0' 2 s Comt, i orma o Diiness MIEE. reasn Amoesador ncs Dunn | SO PR sTRvIcae e 19 |1 0 PAch 81 B UL il Burners — Plumbing — Heating I found that to be true in the 1930's been in the USA instead of at his S S {and contest the Final Report. | DAY PHONE—476 NIGHT PHONE—GREE s “"“”f“ I ama “‘"‘:fl’“l"“' pest in Rome is to finish his book DANCING SCHOOL | GIVEN under my hand and seal distributor, and my volume dropped on Spain and Franco. Dunn was' Winter term classes now en- of the Probate Court at Juneau,}-— - pi % incomes dropped Franco's best friend in the State rolling. 411 Tth St. Phone Red| Alaska, inis 18th day of December,) prssvems..comemzmoes | .x: were even anxi- Department during the Spanish! 575 adv. 443-15t. 1946. i o) f GUs to B0 o i AEWATAnTIE A6V GIvIL War President ‘Truman -oo | FELIX GRAY | E ‘!' hem for papers % hcld a private meeting with Allen| The trolley coaches, street cars, Cemmissioner and Ex-Officio | [§ ¥ = n i .mi ‘¢.l w:,r »1'»— Spreul, president of the Federal and buses of the United States can Probate Judge—dJuneau Precinct i g B x’ 1 ¥ x“ wv" 5 I k!{«l\\ vrrl R:'\fl\w Bank of New York last ceat a total of 7,640,000 passengers, First Pubiication December 20, 1946, i | a ba my state where the de- week to ask Sproul to become Pres increase of 80,000 over 1944. !Last Publization January 10, 1947 posit sone from eight mil- ident of the World Bank. Sproul 7 lior ars just a couple months was smuggled int . « T e Al e Tn LR G toe T LS A Delivered to your job in ia Gate, y s [ required quantities—— | ¢ t of thing I mean,” kit | % Ready for your men to ) m . BIG MS VS. SMALL FARMS ACROSS 31, Auvstralian bird pour—at $18.50 per cu. || m 1 fact behind the o AR felp . vd,, f.o.b. plant. Hauling || t ! I Busificie itteats ) i charge 15c¢ per truck mile. |} 000 a I L sauneir 2 e Other concrete products : a1k gracl on smal 8 M t 5 T 38 I" farming is that the re- ™ will be available soon— ¢ ! should. b en s ssed for nea or Get acquainted with ] lf ry fact t Bureau Agricultural Ecor dared > the study was one reason the Cengress cut its resea tud, mfuriate ive Al Elliott, Ca crat and friend of v g ¢ that has fought al priati farm research ever asked ine b d h epliec gun while C ading a. 1ig MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 10 The President’s vital eal the old law by which no one age to ¢ Republicar 1 cwn more than 160 acres of is being whipped. into reclamation land. The study thi d two towns i riting, the s Valley section of he vin, is comprised ly of b ‘ recor bor o dustria @ 1, is made uj of peo- wil Congr ainst \ tic v Dinuba, the er er th it of coll nad two b 1 1 ablishments ; d up in the last twelve one in Arvin, the big yea imunity; that retail trade! greater in Dinuba; 20 per cen people were the same dollar vol- agriculture mn Dinuba than that - the residents of| o may contain a was 61 per cent ation to end the hat The President supported by to declare ume £ in the de in Arvin THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU, ALASKA 3§ 20 YEARS AGO DECEMBER 27, 1926 McCloskey warned parents that children caught rom THE EMPIRE Wil | Chief of Police J. L throwing rocks cr snowballs on buildings below Calhoun Avenue would DECEMBER 27 be arrested and Loth children and parents fined or jailed Dorothy Stearns Roff | RIS Denhold Neilson | - g ks i Saes Christ. ty memb Belle Clark The Alaska Native Sisterhood gave a ristmas party to members Mrs. Charles Decker and children at Douglas Irving el Agnes Falconer Jennie Kadutco of Yakutat was registered at the Alaskan. ank Hall : “The Shepherd King,” a William Fox production, was soon to be shown at the Palace and among the local children to take part in the prelogue were Mary Clare Hellenthal, Carol Robertson, Renee Guerin, @ e 0 00 0 0 0 0 &5 Friend Mary Metcalf, Sue Stewart, Corrinne Jenne, Beatrice : Mullen, Mary Simpkins, Edna Riendeay, Virginia Mullen, Mary and Jean VanderLeest, Gene Simpkins, Corrinne Duncan, Mary Jean McNaughton, - - NEW SCHOOl ls | L. and F. Lynch, Margaret Monagle. ESIAB[ISHED IN The Empire gave up several columns, with pictures, on the work and AR(T‘C SE(TIQN policy of the Alaska College at Fairbanks. Director of Native e20ecc0eccec e ®oececsccsccs million dol during the Christmas “liquor Ten were reperted dead in New York from drinking “liquor.” The spent holidays in sum of ten “hicago for Dr. George A Dale, Education for the Alaska rvice, stated that a new school- room has been improvised in one of the buildings at the Meade River | | ! 30; low, 29; High Weather report Mine near Point Barrow to accom- | ¢ ewee oo wocsressocssserssee. modate the 20 native children of i ¥ " by the workers. In response to 3 D | L E gl h e aonee wiison,|{ U@IIY LESSONS 1N ENGIISN w. L. GORDON | prinei of the ANS & mel at Bar- § s v e mation of light ircle ssreveacszesszeesa) | t lumber Ninine name ew MRS. L. M. DUNLAP as a paiG-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENI Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: * "WOMAN WHO CAME BACK" torm { Federal Tax—12¢ per Person | PHONE 14__THE ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Teceptucio - - FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1946 BARBER Burnie's Sior BARANOF HOTEL Lower Lobby 9 am. to 6 p.m. or Phone 800 for appointment James C. Cm;pel", CPA BUSINESS COUNSELOR Specializing in Corporation—Municipal and Trust Accounts MOUNZ JUNEAU LODGE N SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month | in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. M. L. MacSPADDEN, Worshipful Master; LEIVERS, Secretary B —— Silver Bow Lodge @Nm A 2, LO.OF, Meets each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M 1. O. O. F. HALL, 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 James W. 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 Things /Iar Ku/r Office | CHARLES R. GRIFFIN Co. 1005 SECOND AVE + SEATTLE 4 - ElLiot 5323 - Serving AlaskaFxclusively < Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSE READY-TO-WEAR "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Seward Street Near Third Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager ¥ianos—Musical Instruments and Supplier Phorie 206 Second and Seward HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Professi Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burner i Blacksmith Work 20TH CENTURY MEAT GENERAL REPAIR WORK | | MARKET Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 “The Store for Men" SABINS Front St—Triangle Bldg. Warfield's Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies FOR Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREA Douglas Boat Shop NEW CONSTRUCTION and REPAIR JOBS FREE ESTIMATE Phone Douglas 192 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—92—95 — —— —| The Charles W. Carter| Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 VANITY BEAUTY SALON Cooper Building Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. ELSIE HILDRETH, Manager Open Evenings Thone 318 PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODPA POP MOTOR REBUILD and MARINE SERVICE Machine Work — Welding ENGINE REBUILDING—HARDWARE 1012 West 10th Street PHONE 863 — EYES EXAMINED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST LENSES PRESCRIBED Second and Franklin PHONE 508 FOR APPOINTMENTS Juneau e e )ttt ) 0 i Lucille’s Beauty Salon % SPECIALIZING IN ALL KINDS AND TYPES OF PERMANENT % WAVES FOR ALL TEXTURES OF HAIR Phone 492 HAIR CUTTING Klein Bldg. FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL WELDING PHONE 787 Third and Franklin 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1346 * The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERICAL SAVINGS | : A ~.