The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 2, 1947, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR g THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1947 ————— JUNEAU, ALASKA -7 > : | other pensions or fixed annuities from trust funds and Daily Alaska Empire 50 - eets, Juneau, Alasks o n¢ | the relationship between prices and income give small it e ) o | The Triangle i AN an Vic e yum1 OCTOBER 2, 1927 o Sl minent New England economist M. Taylor of Strawberry Point underwent an appendectomy at St : , S ot R e B Cleaners P + Second Class Matter. | occur in 1948 falling. . OCTOBER 2 e ; Delivered by carrier in Juneau Sias oe $1.50 ver meathy The e says, will come first sometime | ® Roy Carrig o Forest Ranger Harold Smith spoke cn the afternoon program of the O ia at the tallbwing atey § Heovne ! in the soft goods industry, | ® MG W ® | Sixth Annual Southeast Alaska Fair. He said: “We have been trying to Bags Don't Bel i ‘monthe, in advance, $7.50; | followed by more goods and finally, foods.|® Terrance Majorty B o il s P T hu but just how far gs Yon'{ belong. .. subecribers wil conf avor If they will promptly notity | The recession. i pinion, will last five to seven : (\;Il';;h,'\ ;;::,;’“L:l :‘\u have been successful, time alcne wiil tell ( Under the eyes or in the Busibess Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery | months, but farr will not begin to fall untill ] o ‘:‘ i ‘“,‘I'” # L ol | the knees of your pants. - e L b SN iy " Mamie. Webster e! Mr and Mrs. J. J Stocker left Seattle aboard the Alaska bound for ';“‘I" 'l":“if"ll““_ '(('lva{-rrs B B s aaivily e 'to the tine BoF g0r \v”.m‘ : ; e :,m“"v‘ il B. T teelin ® [ Juncau. Bruce Brown wis on he same Lrip :cur suil‘nf‘xl:'ll:;h':m e oation o 5 SCine AoolB W0 1 o fet gthare TOUT8 Touh Will be ing off payroll e Mrs. Raymond Silver ocal news published He predicts a quick ¥ based on tax reduc- | e . and one of his cronies were cruising along a canal in Venice | CLOSED SATU fiais wor, and lyKeuse: there will [0, /8. 6" 6 s, 9.8 88, B8 8 ndola filled with beauteous dam Home wuz never like this,” ' SATURDAY FPRESENTA e s s { A AFTERNOON PRESENTATI Alaska Newspapers, 1411 ¢ du and a spring building (e | said Jiggs. Presumably, Maggie was back home Pour st WP IN | | “For Better | T'wo whalers, the Hercules and the Traveler, which had been opers l-" Appearance” T'he Spirit of 1940 {ing off Kodiak Island during the summer, were in port, on their way to SEWARD TAKING cocooi CALL hai . o ][”1 i FIGHT INIO COURIS Charles W. Hawkesworth, Allen Shattuck, and 1,500 cases of salmon | 5 happiest inspir T ittle cften is a record of th S| H ieucs th i ¥ { were aboard the Admiral Evans, southbound. Hawkesworth and Shat- | past.” In the present unhappy state of a world that \ppears so often to be ed by a counsel of desp: SEWARD, Alaska. Oct P | tuck SWETe ‘QOIng to Ketchikan " that might not b 1 dictum to follow. It is Mot . " ) etweer privat necessary to go back far. The summer and fall | == "o - Etlgal et A resume of the weather tagged September as nearly an average | 7 of 1940 will do. In that year a would-be ruler of the ‘,‘,,_ wi MEht - it , court | Month, slightly warmer and not quite so wat as the average There | world encountered an intangible battle odd that c 't Saturday when the privately-{were eight consecutive days without measurable precipitation. fused him and finally deterred him from undertaking NCX! Saturday wher . e : 1 undertaking | o ed Seward Light and Power R d ':‘lxllh:“l:[«\I !l“l ((i” ).:IA\(\M:'AWHSJ; 947 ; Company will appear in magise Walter Cleghorn, welterweight of Seldovia, fought a six-round draw | sS ol ght ave made the worl 1 1947 a con- trat (& t ch 0 eplac- | the revious K F'ra SCO. [§ nen as 1 Cooper, iderably more unhappy place than it is today rate’s cour WI nl!»l ac- | the previous night in San Francisco. His opponent was Lefty Cooper, of | —_— poles without a fran- | p Publication by the United Depart- apolis. and the British Admiraity of hitherto secret among Adolf Hitler, Grand Admiral Raeder _ The action was preceded by an r German military leaders shows that in the |AUSUSt 4 city council resolution | 40 after France's fall, when the British calling upon company s e lone against the Nazis, it was the move all poles and other light and) e | 1 yrale that Hitler ar \is mili- | Power equipment from the city { J( ::;fll (:u,‘rim,‘ 1'1”,“, “‘dm x’“’;‘;l‘h stre P AYEUSE 1 Of ekt Vet Mrs. R. D. Peterman, Mrs. H. R. VanderLeest and Mrs. G. E. Krause | ) e aluate ar vh T ! U 1e3 g | s e o s were awarded premiums eir embroidery work cedlewor] \er considerations led them to postpone renewing its franchise re awarded pre ms on their O ork in the nudlc\\mk} invasion of England, “that 1 1 that time, the against invasion s people. recent past, of the problems diminish who als Today's problems the free ates Ladies were warned to “step easy A new tonsorial cxpert was | to join the staff of the Silver Fox Barber Shop . Aside from his hair- ' tyling, he was a single man 0 in osts have what 5-39, and since higher to double or prewar figure section at the Fair nt and Power purchased last e m Mrs. E. W. Knight by Weather: High, 50; low, 46; cloudy terans—Orin Welch, | BN R E RN T s e e S P » the survey, reflect tl Seward and aggregate levels of employme incomes reached during the war he past year consumption of food it said The Needlecraft and Junior Shop 111Y; Seward Street 3 H e | Mail lers Receive P E Jareful Attenti Da”y Lessons in Enghsh b“y i aoibon ail Orders Receive Prompt and Careful Attention e - - —————— - . s i ) ! s - 1 22! SALE L)1 fhE Siite Toftbated convern e WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “A young lady wishes to o o o 4 e o o even from its tele- SPeak with you additional ¥ 1 8 ' Say, “A young WOMAN | iRt OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Pier. Pronounce PER, E as in HERE. S K l R T S particularly “Dema “have continued to advance and to match the total high level of food production. Exports have cc Anchorage dark days of 1940, make in impo; woul@ carry the world would show ir these have beer the British people in which production has been ver; Gonilal stistas Bk ted at record levels, refusal to bow to e, and in - owned While lesc mer nishes mer tributed somewhat to domestic food pressures, but Bahta e e moral mainly in grains, especially wheat Food production has conti received by tion to see the cri einous offense.” reflecting incentives of higher p victory as was showr farmers, government subsidies, and price protection in 1940 In a proposed bond issue to be| OFTEN MISSPELLED: Underrate; two R's. under parity-price legislation, etc In addition to It is difficult course, to mus pon in the October 20 spec- SYNONYMS: Faulty, defective, deficient, imperfect, unsound Sizes 1 Ihru 14 1 intensified efforts by farmers, better-than-average the same feeling of un me courage and 1 $90.000 is earmarked WORD STUDY: a word three times and it is yours.” Let us weather has contributed greatly in achieving high determination as is shown neasure by so expanding the municipally-, jpcrease our vocabulary by mas one word each day. Today's word: production. The first serious weather set-back over many in times of war. Life is much more complex C e PEC b, P“’)’_'"“ OWI" | HEINOUS; hatefully bad; atrocious; giving great offense. (Pronounce P M a peaceful world. Crises lose their wartime clarity ers will vote on whether the city hay-nus). "It was a line But hall be bonded far $300,000 a late s more unit August in the Midwest, a combination Which yjit1e more of a period of six or seven years occurred this year with nd rainy soring followed by a dry, hot July a 15 lower production for some farm products. comm thre 1s of current income and con h lev 0 be learned from a rea “This is particularly true among lowest-income yp.” puman I ups as teachers, nu situatic r rement and We w all boat harbor ~ - es laried families and office workers 11 be just as important. A littl Issues to be decided at the €leC-N p oo s o ot st s o good could well have made impo: es | of the municipal power s s 5 i ST S O S S e S S S S B0 * seward Water Company, pace with rising food costs easy triumph, for one. But the important one IR L > i A. It means “unlimited authority; a free hand.” It is pronounced ve the kind of world we de FOoRU LODGE I world between 1918 and < tion_include: $90,000 for expansion I 0 s E of the generating plant and exten~} MODERN E'“OU E‘I"I' by particularly corn necessity of a decision as that which co ystem sumption, the effects are shared unevenly by the There are other thing Q. Should a weekend guest be willing to enter into any suggested COME IN shein e OB WRITE 3 irit is the important el 2 e v kart blansh, both A's as in AH, and with principal accent on second | i soirit of individual sacrifice for ! of tribution fa KOBERTA LEE Si 2 thru 14 “While the high prices of food may be generally British in 1940—whether to die like men or 3 izes 2 thru 1 acquir and improv- e ation. For many people, incomes have not kept ™8 Of the record of the Nazi conferences in those days now owned by V. Hoban and BAIY 'blans, such as motoring, swimming, cards, and the like? of their great viciories—the corrupting influence of Davis, and $40,000 for acquiring the A, Yes, always. If he does not, he can hardly expect another od Seward marine §;vitatic » e e R Q. What does the French phrase, “carte blanche” mean? Call Mary Joyce at the Baranof k or his new assign- uckman, h ver, is not te word. ——— — - = m w sh' ' taking over his new assigr Luckman, however, is not one Lo for reservations and transportation ] 9 a Infl OII was to turn the world kowtow to labor. In fact, he level- arrangements —adv. 604-tf Q. Is lb.permissible for a man to ask his fiancee to retum all the|trrrrerrrerorrresrrerrorsrorrorrrrarsrsnscnerrree sy-turvy by insisting that the ed sc caustic barbs directly at gifts he has given her if the engagement is broken? Merry-Go-Round i o Amaican skl Glycerine Prcducers be hea (Continued jrum Page - .e A “sm ap and labor- ded by where soaper -able rese s in the most. After con NOTICE TO CREDITOR A. No: but she should return them without being asked, See the exquisite ST § 1 —_—— ered that out of 600 labor newspa- 4 o, Lux, Lifebuoy, Spry) in the years there haa S e as on September 23rd, 1947 LOOK d LEARN b e e g it i comracts wih thelr owa duly appointed Administ an A. C. GORDON LON HOS in Juneau at the end, Anderson won out. kig soap compani { the USA B Ak Estate of MIKE VAGGE, Deceas cne ver rothers, Prc ;amble R4 and that Letters of Administr: C e \ 1 ne of | (Lever rothers, Proctor and Gambl 1t 8 doubtfuil whether as TOADY ficrores on ed oy et aiy AR ] @!®——The House of the miracie business, and ate on one hand as 20,000 of the 110,000 people who " b o e B . hat has been estimated to be the cash value of a high school Vi S d was made C of the Food about 400 small soap companies ON 'wori“for the unions are protected ' Al poreons having clame againist education? t wansdown nmittec other. Always in the past, the o collective barg T i by R D 10 2. Of which farm crop is hominy P ollective bargaining and enjoy giq estate are hereby required to | ; Iny.8 hroducts "0 U £ S " big three had rotated as of ihe benefits which organized labor piecoiyc ot SO o en. | 3 Which are the three smallest States in the Union in area? ne of Alaska’s Excephonal fores the soap assoclation—mu the demands that we establish for our ors and duly verified, within six (6) 4. What character in Dicken's novel “Oliver Twist” wasa trainer of resentment of the “small s0apers.” employees,” announced the MAD montns from the date of this notice . thieves? - )x.:r it was 711,1 z;)\\tlnl'\;\nlll:lll"‘;:)"“"\ whom labor has praised 50 enthu- t, the said Administrator, or his 5. What is a “soiree”? the trade er 2 B s Iy ¢ 2 | 5 tie ,‘,,1‘ Ao afpothtal head of | s sip o attorneys R. E. Robertson and M. E ANSWERS: ickman, newl ¢ (L1 That, briefly, is the young busi- gle at Room 200, Seward Build- | e ickman came in to the largest soap company in ness man picked to head one of the Alicka i 1S 1 nounce: 8 t 4 § + 5 P 2. o - make 4 USA calmly announced that though | moct gifficult and thankless of Dated at Juncau. Alaska. this 23rd Orn world fat situation.!it was his turn to be president of (;ninittees, which decides how day of September, 1047 A 3. Rhode Island, Delaware, and Connecticut. bably cost Luckman |the soap association he would SteD juch the American people should| JSEAL S 4. Fagin. didn't even keep a | aside in favor of a little soaper s b R g i HASA United States Gommiscioner and | 5 AR evening party; pronounce swa-ray, first A as in AH, accent For the iirst time in years, peace fat reigns between the big soap- For, last syllable. 2x-Officio Probate Judge. r t publication, Sept. 25, 1047. (COPYRIGHT, 1947, BELL SYNDICATE. INC) Last publication, Oct. 16, 1947. within the limit pre-, It helped us beat Anderson and the little soapers we were able to encour —_— i il i d in Europe, nut oils in IT SOAP OPERAS H —— d, and so on. It was on¢ of revolutionary move made £ ¥y o Rt D.QTl e SR (- &csword - Puzzie RO radio dramas heard over % j (TIYIRIA NEW SOAP EMPERO Le le the housewife washes o o x d of her dishes have been the bulwark i LA e Bl c Not many people had hez e uck Luckman 1 of soap advertising for years. But Railroad signal JALL ago, wher Luckman dropped them Black \PE hulme, inh: I don't think murder, divorce, fole AV soap empire bears his fath- and sex is good for the public,” he Dng.Dstautad |RE, er's name, called him to Lox ned, “and what isn't good for TE T]l B M B h e e B. M. Behrends z>lz > maCArco-10» o I§ mz zZB - tors, 1 wa been sclcc to head Lever's im istead he concentrated on Bob & Ballk men ible properties in the Hope's humor, more newspaper RIAYI United advertising and on a clean-govern- Yy d me;" coun- | ment tadio drama called “Flghting it Oldest Bank in Alaska Luckman. | Senator 1" replied Luckman's latest sensation has pox ? ¢ Heyworth, | been in the field of labor relations. ! tetter COMMERCIAL SAVINGS thick report| “When I think of the millions of of Luckman’s life. dollars spent annually by business was the story of on psychoanalyzing the tastes and preferences ol customers,” he told the startled business world, I am fappalled at the picayune appropri- iversity | ations for research into thé think- ap for | ing, the desires, and hopes of the has | people on our payrolls. If we were inother ‘to devote to basic industrial rela- ially made | tions research just 10 percent of as City b newspapers MR. KLINKHAMMER as a paid-up suuscriver to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the NYLON HOSIERY— the exquisite full life, and ev ge Made a foray a ing for ate that|the amount we appropriate annu- A ; et up by the Pepso- | al consumer research, we CAPITOL THEATRE foaionscorehings Company. Result: Pepsodent’s d not be such puzzled inhabi- so famous for perfect profits rose from $600,000 s of the cockeyed world in and receive TWO TICKETS to see: fit and long-lasting $3,000,000. h we live auty. Pepsodent as beer man \tly signed a contract . Soothin the soap trade t Lever bought with Chemical W Union s Federal Tax-—12c¢ per Person Pepsodent out only to obtain the (AFL) which H. A. Bra head Perched ervices of Chuck Luckm His of the union, called “one of the i e Pno“ 14—THE noYAL BL“E CAB co. alar $300,000 a year best of good collective Bobbina S i ors gave Luckiman whei he took If we had more mutual under BARTas ;tree RETURN YOU to your home with our complimen B i o_— over his new job was to “oper anding ol sort,” Bradley said, peacock P 4 = - -+ as he thought best the so-calld labor problem L A WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! One of the first things he did | wouldn't exist sefore There is no substitute for newspaper advertising! R et s R (S o

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