The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 19, 1947, Page 2

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)

PAGE TWO YOUR i % TAILORED TRIUMPH Criterion inserts a ribbon of grosgrain through center of Belt ... clasps it with a tasteful-tailored buckle . . . $1.95 M Rehrends Co QUALITY S/INCE /887 MORGENTHAU Hiring Hall TAKES SWAT Agreementio AT WALLACE Be Refained ons Mmoo romer e 1811, Lundeberg, Harrison retary of the Treasury, said today s et x watiace poed it 5 Beligve. No..Lhange much money during the New Deal’s Morgenthau ry of Ag- big spending days th cnce told the then Secreta Needed in Law riculture he was “getting away with FRANC:! pt. 19 murder.” Senator Taft essed Morgenthau declared Wallace confidence teday that Sailors spent more and got less for it dur- Union of the Pacific and ship- ing the 1934-1937 period than Harry owners can reach a compromisc Hopkins and Harold L. Ickes, who to ictain the hiring hall without directed huge outlays as directors améendment of, the Taft-Hartley of Federal Relief and Pélerdl Works Law. programs. Taft told reporters after a con- “Wallace's whole theory of spend- ference with Harry Lun ing in order to reduce agricultural representing the Union, and Gre production always seemed nonsense ory Harrison, shipowners' repre- to me,” the New Yorker wrote in the sentative, “it scems to me can first of six articles for Collies :al- work the matter out without any ing with his Cabinet job under amendment of the Act ; Franklin D. Roosevelt Morgenthau d ribed the late 'g \uu! the union offi- Hopkins as the “best” of the New ¢ eonfidentiwe can work Deal spenders because he got money 1* Ut into_circulation quickly for pump- Harrison sdtd “That goes for me 0. priming purposes people work. and gave destitute The present contract between the shipowners and the Sailors Union| Ickes, he said, was “so anxious to keep graft and politics out of the ncludes the use of a hiring hall | Fublic Works program that he prac- 1b: contract expires Sept Rt tically spent money through a medi- (€ union has demanded the hir-| o dropper.” - Tckes' slowness in N8 hall clause te included in thej making decisions was “sometimes a D€V asreement | real handicap,” Morgenthau added hiring. ‘hall /15 ‘8 . place fram VEIFRA PP N which the union dispatches men the jobs, generally en a rotat-| SOU"HEAS"ERN IN is Only union members| d — e, — PORT FROM SOUTH — Truman Is At Norfolk THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA TOKYO DIKES FALL BEFORE FLOOD CREST Two Thousand Lives Lost in Typhoon Disaster, Is Estimate. Now TOKYO, 19.—(P—Typhoon- engendered flood waters broke Sept thre 1 dikes into additional sec- tions of Tokyo iate today as U. 8 relief withorities estimated the four-day old disaster had taken at least 2,000 Japanese lives. The swollen Naka River broke its banks at two places and spread over flatlands in the northeast and cast- sections of the city. Japa- nese police and the bank farther downstream to ease the pressure, but they said the “critical” late to- 1most er situation was night Water was as deep as ten feet at some peints between the Naka and the parallel Edo River, and had penetrated two and one-half miles from where it first entered the city: Thursday. More than 50,000 residents were moved to safety, most of them being ferried across the surging Naka River by American troops in assault boats. Londen Trade Fascists Bah' SEATTLE fRIp 5 bt o LONDON, Sevt. 19.—P—The Lon- | don Trades Council, representifng | 650,000 »d workers, has asked Home ry Chuterede to ban all st meetings in London and sponsor legislation outlawing Fascist organizations and activity Its memorandum demande rearrest of Sir Oswald Mosley er of the British Union of Fi who was detained during the war She council followed the lead of the British Trades Union Congress, ly 8,000.000 work- firemen breached | ' arrive | work at an accredited school of pub- lic health, beginning this month, plus Uhree months of field training in a health department under sup- ervision of a public health educa- tor. The new fellows and the universi- riculture he was “getting away with University of Michigan: George V. Leadbetter, Juneau, Alaska e MARRIAGE LICENSE William S. Horton, 24, and Mar- tha Lawrence, 20, both of Hoonah applied yester to U. S. Commis . ECONOMY i 15 SICK WASHINGTON, Sept. 19. — P~ The U. 8. Public Health Service an- ,nounced today that 21 out of 25| ISenator Ives Talks About High Prices Also Gen- | eral Production — JUNEAU, AL..\S¥A | persons hay> acvepted proffered | fellowships in health education fi- | WASHINGTON, Sept. 19. — (= WEATHER BULLETIN Senator Ives (R.-N.Y.) said today DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A, M,, 120TH MERIDIAN TIM| { ;nanced by the National Foundation { for Infantile Paralysis. Surgeon General Thomas Parran said the fellowships will entitle those who have accepted them to nine months of graduate 2cademic license V. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU the world's economy is sick because Max. temp., | TODAY of “under-production” and that| last | Lowcst 4:30am. 24 Weather at soaring prices at home are only a Station 24 hrs* | temp. temp. Precip. 4:30 a.m. symptom of this “disease.” Anchorage 54 38 38 02 Cloudy i “Everybody is talking about high Barrow 28 24 25 Trace Cloudy ‘pfices and they are pretty bad,” 1ves | Bethel 42 33 33 Trace Pt. Cloudy jtold a reporter. “But we'll never Ccrdova 52 | 44 44 38 Drizzle |get them down until we get pro- Dawson 49 | ! v | duction up.” Edmonton 50 3 34 0 Fog and Snow Ives' comment followed a report | pairbanks 44 21 21 Trace Clear {by the Bureau of Labor Statistics Haines 55 49 49 Rain | placing wholesale prices of food and gavre 45 35 35 68 Clear |farm products at the highest level | yuneau Airport 51 19 50 51 Rain |in history although wholesale prices getchikan 64 50 51 0 Pt. Cloudy { for the entire list of 900 commiodities ' g odiak 56 42 42 0 Clear | covered by the survey still were 59 gotzebue 35 29 29 02 Clear {per cent below the record set in py;hank Li 50 50 0 Clear 11920 | McGrath 42 30 30 03 Pt. Cloudy At the same time, Senator Elmer nome 36 24 30 01 Cloudy ‘;Thomas (D.-Okla.) reiterated his yorthway 38 7 21 Snow | conténtion that this countfy may 'peterspure 54 48 48 10 Rain have to put uo with “inflation” if it poyt1ana 66 42 42 0 Pt. Cloudy | is going to pay off the national debt pyince George 59 22 30 0 Clear | and meet other costs of government. | prince Rupert g 50 _Thomas added it may be another ge,itle 66 43 43 0 Cloudy | |six “years or even longer before gijijxa 53 53 54 62 Fog and Rain | the price situation becomes stabi- whitehorse 60 58 . j et Yakutat 52 50 52 217 Rain *—(4:30 2. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. roday) WEATHER SYNOPSIS: The wedge of high pressure extending from eastern Canada to the West Coast in the vicinity of Graham Island and then scuthwestward into the Pacific has decreased slightly in intensity and has moved wly southward and eastward. A series of storms con- tinue to move northeastward from the central Pacific through the Guif of Alaska and into northwestern Canada. The cold air which is moving southeastward across the mainland of Alaska has advanced to within The movement of this !cold air to the southeast is expected to continue but at a much lower U. S, Cosst Guard Cutter Wachu- rate of speed. Skies over the northwestern portion of the United States sett, Which took ths Crawford and over most of Canada continue mostly cloudy and light rain or Congressional Committee to Se+ snow has occurred at most stations east of the Rocky Mountains. Tem- attle after picking up the members peratures over these areas continue below normal. Skies along the West at Ketehikan on September 13, Coast of the United States and as far north as Vancouver have been LS xpected to return to Juneau practically clear during the past 24 hours and temperatures have been after loading ship stores and sup- normal. Cloudiness increased very rapidly over Southeast Alaska yester- plies in Seattle. day afternoon and spread over the entire area by daybreak this morning. No information has been receiv- Winds in Southeast Alaska inereased to 20 to 30 miles per hour from the ed, but the vessel probably will southeast and occasional gusts as high as 50 miles per hour have been back at her home port reported. Temperatures in Southeast Alaska reached a high of 64 degrees sometime next week. at Ketchikan yesterday and fell to the high 40s during the night at = most stations. Skies over the interior of Alaska have been vartly cloud during the past 24 hours, cccasional light snow flurries have been re- ported and temperatures have ranged from 25 to 35 degrees. her Fairbank;fiayoi fo repres ne ‘”; ich ca \‘1: d\‘ljl‘»’l:r»:‘h(‘i‘-“'?::\‘:::l ) MARINE “TEATHER BULLETIN ies W D ¥ B ' B F " l Reports from Marine Stations at 1:30 P. M. today | of Fa i e a 'g es "a | WIND Height of Waves s 2 I Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) ROOSEVE[‘I’S FI"ED KENNEWICK, Wash. Sept. 19.#fape Spercer .. Cloudy 52 WSW. 30 3 fect | M—The hundreds of Central JEldred Rock Cloudy 58 SSW = 26 3 feet Washington visitors to the Kenne- Point Retrzat Rain 51 SwW 15 2 feet FOR FAST DRIVING wick Grape Festival, three days of Five ¥hger Light Cloudy 53 SSE 22 6 feet parades, musie, contests and ex- Linccln Rock Drizzle 54 W 10 3 feet 3 42458 i hibits, looked forward today to the Guard Island Rain Squalls 53 SW 22 4 Teot LAKE SUCCESS, N arrival of Mayor A. H. Nordale, Cape Decision Drizzle 54 ESE 12 2 feet 19 Ple: ~ of Fairbanks, Alaska. Mayor Nor- MARINE FORECAST FOR PERIOD ENDING SATURDAY EVE- ng charges . dale, accompanied by several Es- NING: Icy Strait Area—westerlysto northwesterly winds 25 to 35 miles jr. and his wife, the former Eth-'yimee was to express the thanks ber hour decreasing to 15 to 35 miles per hour tonight. Balance of the el Dupont, were fined $15 each 1St or the Alagka city for air ship-| protected waters north of Petersburg—southerly winds 20 to 30 miles night. They appeared tefore PO- menis of vetgetables and fruit per hour decreasing to 15 to 20 miles ver hour tonight becoming north- lice Justice William Hinrichs on you) cponsors said. The festival erly Suturday and increasing to 20 to 30 miles per hour. Protected c that they drove through ;yeneq yesterday. waters of Southeast Alaska south of Petersburg and outside waters, he village at 52 miles an hour two months ago - RITES FOR INFANT Elza Murphy, infant son of Mrs. Phoebe Murphy, born August 7, died yesterday. Funeral services wers held at 2 o'clock this afterncon at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, with John Goins officiating in the absence of the Rev. Walter Soboleff of Memorial Presbyterian Church | Interment wiii be in Evergreen Cemetery o — BLANCHARDS HERE Mrs. A. C. Blanchard of Skagway entered St. Ann's Hospital yester- day. Her husband is registered at the Baranof Hotel - - HAFPY BIRTHDAY, VERNA Mi Verna Carrigan's birthday was celebrated today with a gift of :ologne from the employees of the Juneau-Douglas Telephone Company ading 60 tons of m quah yesterday in Taku Harbor onto the river beat Taku Chief For Juneau, the South " , had little cargo, having unioa SHOREOLIE, e s of her fraig in Ketchi- President Il’\:mzln arrived here i Cannel Bus Lines received the Dasileship (isson a new F bus on the fIr A four-wheeler trailer was brought up from Ketchikan Loading at the Juneau Cold Storagc this afternoon, the South- WHEN YOU ASK rn tcok aboard a cargo of five carloads of frozen fish for ship- ment south. MILLER FL HOME Alex Miller, s i) d Mrs. Charles Miller of Fairba , flew to Fairbanks yesterday via Pan Am- erican Airways. He has been visiting in Juneau for the past two weeks Alex is a graduate of Juneau High School, Class of 41, and is now employed in his father’s bar, the Dreamland B Pour yourself a glas: great Kentucky wh joy its rare smoothn bourbon flavor and mel quet. You will always - BENECKE GOING SOU ©O. F. Benecke, business for Alaska Coastal Airlines pected to Ieave ay with American Airways on a week” ness trip to Seattle and Portland ger was ex- Par 0 busi- - - - FVW MEETING TONIGHT Taku Post, Ve ans of Foreign Wars, will hold its regular meeting and Stag Party tonight at 8 o'clock in its Seward Street clubrooms. - - - | The United States now has 110,- 500 miles of trolley coach, street car and bus routes, a two percent increase over 1944. -e— — | Approximately $300,000,000 worth | of glass is manufactured in the| United States every year Aok for Rentuckys Finest ATERFILL~FRAZIEK * Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey s of this key and en- with pleasure, serve it with pride. fay cruise from Rio de | ind a big chocolate cake baked by her mother, Mrs. Minnie Hurley. FOR BOURBON its rich i f in low bou- drink it Ba"d 100 PROOF - Dixon Entrance to Sitka— southerly to southwesterly winds 15 to 20 miles KETCHIKAN VISITOR C. D. Tandy, of Ketchikan, is stop- ping at the Gastineau winds 10 to 20 miles per hour. Rain show along eoast south of Sitka. Considerable fog in protected waters tonight. ! | { LADIES’ NIGHT at the ELKS SATURDAY : * MUSIC at 10:00 p.m . * REFRESHAMENTS | sioner Felix Gray for a marriage per hour. Outside waters, Sitka to Yakutat—westerly to northwesterly | rs over protected waters and | FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1947 MRS, KAFER ENDING GIRL SCOUT NEWS NOTES S(ou' WORK HERE- | Gin Secout Trcop To. 10 met 1 ‘Thur:clay afterncon, Sept. 18, in |the Methodist Church. We open- FINA[ MEEI'"GS“' our meeting by saying our Ipledge to the flaz and singing P “Alaska, My Alaska.” We also clect- Mrs. Marjory 8. mater Is re- ed officers as follows: President, turning to Kotchikan Sunday, Sep-| Margorie Klingbiel; Vice President, tember 28, following three wecks Gladys Usggen; Sccretary, Geral- lof training of Girl Scout lenders|dine Thompson; Treasurer, Har- Sergeant-at- reporter, 'and committec members in Juneau riet Meriweather; and Douglas. Ari Yvonne Swanson; Mrs. Kafer has tec Sharon LeBarra. 's series of conferen | We also elected color bearers and Gifl Scout Couneil. Last Tuesday guards. They are Melinda Church. evening at the Lutheran Church,|Dcrothy Roberds, Esther Lavold, the explained the association form ! Marline Chon. There was no oth- of organization presently used by er new busintss and the President ! Juneau and Douglas Seout groups.| adjourned the meeting. — Sharon A third and last conference will| LeBarr Reporter. be held at the Governor's House| The Girl Scouts of Troop 11 m at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday evening.|at the Lutheran Church at 4 By the end of her visit Ml‘»‘ntlmk Thursday afternoon. We Kafer will also have devo 10 played a game, Then we forma hours to leadership training of both|a horseshoe and learned how the Brownic and Intermediate to use color guards. Then we col- groups. |lected meney for our dues and Browniz leaders and committee| American Girl magazine and for memkbers will meet with her at|cur troop numbers and nam: band 1:30 Monday afternoon in the A lady came and helped us with small chapel of the Methodistjour color guards. The meeting church, and a conference with was dismissed about 5 o'clock leaders and troop committee mem-'Suzanne Miller, Reporter bers of the intermediate group R will take place Wednesday after- nocn at o'clock - IN TOWN | Gilbert Ousdal, of Van Zant Wash., is at the Gastineau Hotel. VISITOR FROM ILLINOIS John Volker, of East St. Louis, Illinois, is staying at the Gastineau. .o Sell it with an Empire Wantad . | Were mighty glad - Doctor suggested Bordens'! 2 | When the dector saw John for the first time, he thought he was one of the healthiest babies he'd ever seen. I asked him about John's formula, and he suggested Borden’s Vitamin D | Evaporated Milk. I found it has three times as much VitaminD | as before—400 units in every pint. John's getting his full day’s | supply of Vitamin D now. He’s more of a buster than ever! P.S. to Mothers: Borden’s Vitamin D Evapo- | rated Milk is accepted by the American Medical ¥ Association, Council on Foods and Nutrition. And Borden's does wonders for puddings! ¢ One of my friends gave me a new pudding recipe that called for Borden’s Evaporated. It was the first time I'd ever used Borden’s for cooking, and I was certainly pleased with the re- sults. That pudding was just grand—so rich and smooth. My husband loved it. I've never found anything better for puddings —just try it and see! ‘FOR A HEAVENLY CHOCOLATE PUDDING —— TRY. THIS!"< seeecssss Chocolate Floating Island 1 cup Borden's Vitamin D Evaporated Milk 1 cup water 1 square (1 0z, unsweeten chocolate 2 et yol Y teaspoon salt Blend Borden's Vitamin D Evaporated Milk and water. Heat 1% cups of milk mixture with chocolate in top of double boiler. When choco- late is melted; beat until blended. Combine egg yolks, salt, and sugar; slowly add remainder of cold mixture, stirring until smooth. Gradually stir in hot mixture. Return to double boiler and cook oves boiling water, stirring constantly, about 5 minutss, of until mixture will coat a metal spoon. Add vanilla. Chill. Pour into sher- bet glasses. Beat egg white until stiff. Gradu- ally beat in powdered sugar. Add vanilla. Drop a spoonful on top of each serving. Serves 4. 1% cup sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 egg white 2 tablespoons powdered sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla b 3 vrdes) eessessssvse s R I I S I RN I R R RN ) No finer milk in any can! NOW...400 UNITS OF VITAMIN D PER PINT

Other pages from this issue: