The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 30, 1947, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Published every ev:aing except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY from E will be impression which we may ther travelers among Europe. This is anything like as the sizable the Euro- ard as the , the trouble is not so much Second and Main WELEN TROY MO! - - PresRent s directed (in terms of Euro- DOROTHY TROY 30 - - Vice-President WILLIAM R_CA - - - Editor and Manager et the impression of loaf- R > - - - - Ml‘m:;;ln):‘ lnduo; is from surface - we: at the stores. Congressmen Ju in search of s of their f he doc SUBSCRIPTION RATES ook t s o aft n R iriosit Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; locked at 5 o« . e afternoon. Their curiosity . months .\u:;v c.:; y?-lr‘. $15.00 is immediately pique And wonder is added to ¢ aid. at tes: ked e iy Lorihs. T sdvehos $1.0e; | curiosd e of beaches packed by long s d by drawnout weekendir r if they will promptly noffly ot & Deoe \he Business Office of any failure or trregularity in the delivery af their papers. Telephone more than the spectacle, 1 windows, of the army of wheel soon as F \ seeming slackness, the scene | observabi Parisians News Office, 602; Busine: to it or © the local news spivs, form-filers in the i Thes2 Alaska Newspapers, 1411 e ob- ople of a share in which western s is, of cours But of a pe only Italy seems ough how the Italians thinnest shoestring in ling mystery. The industry ot the product of exhorta- ent ai:d less encouraging in e has been a lack of leader- fortun: east ship, for the Socia both countries seem to have come to office o nises of the blessings of i ness, and ns pol ) liker to swallow his owr e trums. This, however, he is now being forced to do rance and Britain. The taken very serious for instanc without a struggle trouble is that he is The miners of Ei THE FEDERAL PAYROLL in Senator Harry F. Byrd of Virginia points out his latest report that in spite of reported economies the Federal employment still is twice the pre level. In 1939 there were 929,000 such workers. Tod: there are 2,048,188, not counting those serving without compensation. e These workers are employed in 2,039 units. The s presidential office accounts for 17 units with 1076 | %! o persons employed. The cabinet departments have 1,207 ‘T:";’;E‘ ;r““‘m,h units accounting for 1,655,990 employees. Then there jobs. fi\nt 4 are independent agencies or offices numbering 833 | In France, the Commun ready converts to their go-slow campaign a cherished re ent to a full day's work. curiously in nd ay | er have the pled, There is no crisis feeling because pay envelopes are full t present) are forthcoming. Ci s from the absence of mployment has been in government planning or by m least in the manual e a great part removed units with 376,708 employees, and emergency agencies government aid. Few with 202 units and 51,114 employees. ’occupauons. work for fun of it, and even While the present total represents a reduction JAX’genlmn an alarm has been sounded becauss a re- from the wartime peak of 3,650,000, almost a million | gime of full pay and virtuall guaranteed work has of this reduction were in the rolls of industrial work- made for absenteeism. Perhaps there is a warning sure THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA = s 20 YEARS AGO 7%': emrpirEe | | SEPTEMBER 30, 1927 Mrs. W. S. Pullen won four premiums in the home canning depart- 2 ¥ SEPTEMBER 30 ® ment at the Southeast Alaska Fair. Her prize-winning delectables in- : H:Z"I M"FL"M ® | cluded spiced gooseberries, loganberry jam, currant jam and crabapple ngus Foss i % . Terry Don Gallagher e ° Mrs. F. M. Kardanoff ol TR ° Mrs. W. M. Whitehead o George M. Simpkins, of Simpkins Bindery, sailed on the Pflncml . Elvrud Berggren o | Louise for a combined business and pleasure trip to Seattle. Aso -bonrd’ 3 Henry A. Benson e the Louise were Mr. and Mrs. . R. McQueen, who expected to remnin‘ . Cliff Bowers ® |in Seattle for several weeks. ° .| - 28 TG At M AR R et W e B8 05 Winners of the girs' bicycle race held the previous day at the 7 R TR T | Fair were: Jean VanderLeest and Beatrice Mullen, first and second prize winners in the first race; Mary VanderLeest, Barbara Winn and Dana DeVighne, first, second and third prize winners in the second race. PLENTY TO NIBBLE DURING 'SHOPPING', CATHOLIC BAZAAR Fel Toner, assisted by! A Children’s Pageant was among activities scheduled for the fol- of CDA, will preside!lowing day at the Fair. First and second prizes were promised for the Tea Room which will be!best costume and character maintained by the children and their pets. i the hours of the| i Bazaar, Friday and Satur-| A fashion show was presented at the Fair Buiding by Gordon’s, of this week, October 3 and g A Behrends and Goldstein's Emporium. Christine Halvorsen, Mrs. :m.jifl‘);;': ::”;}:S):?;:m\vvmirred Jones and Leona Graber arranged tne presentations for the ke 3 i Fall costumes were modeled by Edithe Young, Belva Wil- ¥ vith | three stores. made pastries served with w coffee .'.nll offer a wel-|liams, Irma Williams, Harold sackson (in English tweed), Mildred Mor- visitors browsing Tison, Mrs. E. Kaser, Evelyn Judson, Mrs. Ray Stevens, Irene Bliss, booths. Those Natalia Kashevaroff, Margaret Peterson, Corrine Duncan, Renee | for more suDSLan»‘Guerm. Lillian Bayers and Mrs. Felix Gray. . or who care to . p op or loaf around | Mary Leigh Tubbs and Rodney Nordling were awarded fifst and will., G Y’Aha”‘se:ond prizes, respectively, for being the best’babies, by weight, under by e hot dog. stand |, 0 of age, entered in the Baby Show'at the Fair. operated by the Filipino Club. The | 4 ay regale themselves | Weather: High, 48; low, 41; cloudy. and ice cream provided | e The Oduna, under Capt. William A. Connell, arrived from the south with 150 tons of coal for Femmer's dock and 30,000 feet of lumber for the Alaska Juneau whoarf. 5 Mrs members B SSRGS CIIBIN, | SR Daily Lessons in English % .. corpon | open Friday eve-; and again at| afternoon, and 8 doors w at 8 o'clo Saturday Saturday night. i o e, WORDS OFTEN MISWSED: Do not confuse ABDOMINAL (per- EAU WOM. CLUB taining to the abdomen) with ABOMINABLE (revolting; detestable). OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Difference. Pronounce dif-er-ens, ss 1 at 2 o'clock in AEL&P Co. pent- | three syllables, and not dif-rens. Meeting Wednesday Oct. | house. | OFTEN MISSPELLED: Consensus; three S's, and not CONCENSUS. ers, most of them emploved on military work for | which, Senator Byrd remarks, possible peacetime | justification could be rigged up A good many of them were native workers overseas. Thus the number of non-industrial, strictly administrative employees who have been taken off the swollen wartime payroll number only 650,000 It is granted that Senator Byrd and his commit- educe non-essential governmental expenditures He must buck the biggest highly organized. fer all. one solely of chari here for the Wallaceites who advocate job security Be that as it may, constrained to comment, employment would, in fact, be a godsend, since therz | is nothing ese that will get labor for the mines, for textile industries, and for agriculture, and that will really clear the way for exports.” However, we cannot throw up our hands over the |fate of Europe as a result of the contrasts that our visiting legislators are noting. ty these people are situated on the accesses to our con- tinent and are custodians with ourselves of our civili- In other words, the issue is connected with MRS. EDW. P. CHESTER, Pres, the London Economist is MRS. FOREST G. AYERS, Rec.- A moderate degree of un Secy —adv. 694-t2| ., { Wantads for bargains. National Forest Timber " For Sale | Sealed bids will be received by the | Regional Forester, Juneau, Alaska, | up to and including 9 A.M., October | 17, 1947, for all the merchantable | dead timber, standing or down, and | all the live timber marked or desig- | The question is not It has to do with the fact that SYNONYMS: Embarrass, encumber, disconcert, confuse, confound, complicate. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us! increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: COMPLEMENT; that which fills up or completes. “The complement of our summer stock has arrived.” by MODERN ETIQUETTE Yopesra e | et e e e} Q. If children are old enough to eat at tnc iable with the adults, | should they be kept from taking part in the conversation? A. No; it is good training to include them in the conversation at ional security. That in itself calls for patience erance, though both gualities will come natur- ¥ if we bear in d what western Europe has been The best aid that we can render in the west Europe as well as ourselves is self-ielp program that will go to the ruction, and we have no ¢ consensus of the peregri- of g for a Europea this wi slators. nt of the meats Wwants to kill the Preside: their United States. through any In his book, Reilly gives away e rises. If all the signals used by Secret Ser- ted y, prices vice men while conducting the may be expected to President on the road, and exact within six months, measures taken to proteet him rents might take at least a from crowds. Result: Maloney is drafting leg- islation to be introduced in Con- gress next year making it illegal Al Guckenberger, Executive Sec- retary New York State Food Mer- et v e e Ifor a Secret Servic n v att . !chants Association: 3 . Bsuok T 4 secrets of the trade following his ame would be. “Prices. .will level off Shortly | retirement. and merely at Morgen- as they had begun to do last Aug- Note—One man who went to his laughed thau's comment. Now that he has|ust before controls were reimposed.” grave with priceless secrets on his seen the articles, the (Iose-hppcd: Herbert U. Nelson, Exer:ut'lve‘“pS was Secret Service man Jim ex-Vice President hasn't even per- | Vice-President, National Assocla- gioan who was given the job of mitted his close friends to learn tion of Real Estate Boards: protecting one lady friend of Pres- his real reaction. “We've got a gang in power Who j4.¢ Harding. Sloan was offered Note—When Morgenthau signed thinks solely of the consumer, and o money by several publishers up with Collier's, the magazine usually in terms of ‘protecting’|pu¢ nis reply was: “Those secrets agreed to permit him to cut out him.” will die with me.” They did any objectionable portions of the —_ (coryRianT. 1947, Seif 538 ¢ y IN " g YNDICATE. INC) diary. Morgenthau sent the section | MERRY-GO-ROUND Lk e RTINS A on Mrs. Roosevelt to the former| Worse political break General| First Lady for her approval. He did | MacArthur has received so far: the same with the part on Harry Gerald L. K. Smith has launched Hopkins, referring it to Hopkins' acampaign for “MacArthur for Boswell, famed playwright Robert President.” . Western politics | E. Sherwood. Somehow, Morgen- say Taft's tour through California ACROSS gg finl{mg{'latd thau forgot to clear with Wallace. was a flop—until his wife Martha| - Temporary Hil jumped into the breach. . .Ed Pauly, 4. Flogged fown PREDICTIONS WHICH DIDN'T the big Democratic finance man, 9. Writing 'm;&gnke fish COME TRUE has moved his family from Cali-| ,, Jmplement . Authorize | 12. ventilate Refuse Here arz more statements which fcinia to Washington. Despite this, 13. Connect Fury the 14 The herbevo 4. 48 certain statement-makers would like he contends that his job in Note of the 3 3 15. Mountain in s to forget—this time from some ol War Department is only “tempor- Crete ,,.'_\v.,w the barons cf business who descend ary” Senator Taft and Harold | 16 So American ork state upon Washington to demand that Stassen have agreed to speak on! 17. Pinch e price controls be lifted: Arthur the same platform for an Towa 18- Recover 86. Exist : 20. Predicament . One of the Bruce, Pres.dent, National Lumber State hankers convention in Des| 22. Pronoun Muses Manufacturers Association Mofnes, October 8, bpt it took; 33 CltyinIndiana . Garden “I am personally of the opinion some deft maneuvering to arrange| 27 Fenitential ety that we would be better off if the it. Taft was willing to appear with 4 o bsalm et praduog Oftice of Price Administration were Stassen but Stassen's adviserswere| 35 Short sicep Otieme’" to die a natural death June 30th.” scared. Finally Stassen overruled 33 Plioke M gar (One year later, lumber had swept them. However, it's been agreed A gk pRrmatre upward 73.4 percent over the 1945 backstage that the two men will Price Control average not clash Crossword Puzzle nated for cutting, on an area total-{ 5 - . i the table. However, = \ng approximately 96 acres in Area ! . ab] ; er, be »sur.e they do have only a part in the conversa Aion, and don’t monopolize it. 1, Sitkoh Bay. Chichagof Island P | Tongass National Forest ,Alaska, es: Q Isn't it out of place to have guests announced at an informal | | | | timated to be 3286000 feet B.M., | dinner? more or less, of Sitka spruce and ! A. Yes; this is done only at the forrhal dinner. western hemlock sawtimber, and 2.- | Q. What reply should a girl make when a man thanks her for a 000 linear feet, more or less, of pil- gdame? ing. No bids of less than $2.00 per | A S ; “ foved 1 " “You » M foet B, for spruce and $1.00 per | e he may reply, “I enjoyed it too,” or, “You're very welcome. M feet BM. for hemlock sawtimber, | and 1c per linear foot for piling upy to and including 95 feet in length and 1%2c per linear foot for »iling ¢ LOOK and LEAR b A. C. GORDON ) over 95 feet in length, will be con- | b e e s m e e e sidered $500.00 must accompany 1. Where on the earth is the coldest weather registered? each bid, to be applied on the pur- | 2. What are the six principal grains? chase price, refunded, or retained in | 5. Which is the chief seaport of Nova Scotia? part as liquidated damages, accord- 4. Who invented the revolver? ing to the conditions of sale. Pri-| 5. Which was Wagner's last and greatest opera? mary manufacture outside of the Territory of Alaska of any part of ANSWERS: L 1. Northern Siberia. the timber is subject to the consent | 2, Wheat, corn, rye; barl e and o of the Regional Forester. The xight| ' o 238, barley, oats, and rice, is reserved to reject any or all bids| ' S:n:fuaeTC PR received. Before bids are submit- | A o 92) ted, full information concerning the | 5. “Parsifal,” founded on the story of the Holy Grail, finished in timber, the conditions of sale, and '1882. | the submission of bids should be ,obtained from the Division Super- visor or the Regional Forester, Ju- X neau, Alaska. | 4 1891—uver Half a Century of Banking—1947 | First publication, Sept. 17, 1947. Last publication, Sept. 30, 1947. | — — | 1 The B. M. Behrends TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1947 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 v, m, CHAS. B. HOLLAND, Worshipful Master; JAMES w LEIVERS, Secretary. ¢ B.P.0.ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers wel- come. VICTOR POWER, Ex- alted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Sec- retary. VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS Taku Post No. 5550 Moets first and third Pridays. Post Hall, Sew- ard St. Visiting Com- rades Welcome. H. 8. GRUENING, Com- mander: J. C. BRADY, Adjutant. - — You'll Always Get a Better Deal in Fur Styles and Values at Martin Viclor Furs, Inc. Swedish Fur Craftsmen for Three Generations James C. Cooper, CPA BUSINESS COUNSELOR Specializing in Corporation—Municipal and CHARLES R. GRIFFIN Co Trust Accounts 1005 SECOND AVE + SEATILE 4 ELiot 5323 The Erwin Feed Co. m Office in Case Lot Grocery = PHONE 1704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE CALIFORNIA Grosery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices STEVENS’® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR seward Street Near Third Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phoue 206 Second and Seward Things for Your Office “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 FREE DELIVERY Juneau "“The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacista BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is & Profession ARCHIE B. BETTS Public Accountant Auditor HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burne: Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phone 204 929 W. 12th St. Warfield’s Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies Tax Counselor Simpson Bldg. Phone 757 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Ph HORTOGES DANISH one 549 Fred W. Wendt 4 ICE CREAM You'll Find Food Finer and i Service More Complete at Huichings Economy THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE BINGLE O Market Choice Meats At All Times PHONES 553—92—95 The Charles W. Carter ( Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 1368 PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Remington Typewritefi SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” Window—Auto—Plate—~GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO0. 121 MAIN STREET DON ABEL PHONE 633 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Junean Motor Co. Foot of Main Street BARANOF ALASKA’S FINEST HOTEL EAT IN THE BUBBLE ROOM MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS I a daily hhlt—llk(;oEr 19 5‘,‘5:‘3.’ Juneau Dairies, Inc. Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle bown s — PR ¢ JUKEAU PLUMBING & HEATIN 3 T pu:.nc store- | ‘ c o 4. Measure of ouses Sagice.s A PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL “WELDING Third and Franklin || 9. Garden flower 10. Malign PHONE 787 (The Stassen people 11. Back f thy Wesley Hardenberg, President, would be quite happy to go along HI(I:EVJ?( ” the American Meat Institute: on a Taft-Stassen ticket) . . John 19. Tediihle | —— T What is needed is for Congress L. Lewis has already engaged three 21. Restrain e — to do away entirely with all OPA suites, three double-rooms, and - X Gropper B! meat and livestock price regula- three single-rooms at San Fran- 6 R roney MR. CASPERSON tions of every description so that ' cisco’s Palace Hotel for the forth- R 7 5 ccnsumers again may get the kind coming AF of L convention. The as a paid-up suvscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA of r:nm:t tthei'xwam. when they suites run from $14 a day up to | Funeral oration EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING want it, at a fair competitive mar- $30. . Mountain ash 2 . b $ - oo for **" Present this coupon to the box office of the | el chers an John E. Jaeger, President, Na- CCRET SERVICE linen tional Association of Retail Gro- The brawny tight-lipped men | S CAPITOL THEATRE cers told the American Wholesale charged by Congress with protect- | 36. American 4 Grocers Association: ing the President of the United s " and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “We (retail grocers) feel that States are ilashing mental daggers Present " 2 S g ggers 3 . o the time has arrived when ac- at cne of their ex-colleagues . AHarceEy CAESAI “d cllzopnm tions must be taken to prevent Object of Secret Service wrath is . Period of time orward part Federal Tax-~12c per Person renewal of the Price Control act. ex-chief of the White House de- h spear Competition will benefit the con- tail, Mike Reilly, who has . Sitkworm ‘ Mik ) has just Followin, ’no“ l m no'u BL“ m co . g at : o sumer by making available ample written the inside story of how to 1ood at reasonable prices. guard the President. Reilly’s book Robert R. Wason, President, Na- has hbeen privately characterized tional Association of Manufactur- by Secret Service Chief James Ma- ers: |loney, as “a handbook of assassin- “If-OPA is finaly dead, women. ation’—a primer for anyone who | ks .f;;;il- once . Egyptian solar ™ disk and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and ® 'RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! 5| . Hailing call Notany Perceives . Collection of facts Special Dinner 5to8P. M. $2.50 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 Quality Work Clothing c«npmemfulu ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Alaska Laundy CITY DRY PHONE 8 R. W. COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymouth—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks - ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788 142 Willoughby Ave. Lucille's Beauty Salon Specializing In all kinds of Wayes for all Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co.

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