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PAGL FOU Dail ed every etoaing excent ) EMPIRE PRINTING CO Second and Main MELEN TROY MONSEN WILLIAM R. CAR ELMER A_FRIEN AL { Juneau as SUBSCRIP months, SK.00 sne mo 1.50 ths B af their papers Telephone Jifice. 602 Business K ; MEMEER OF ASSOCIATED wice credited in t lso the ATIONAL DEPRE \ y Alaska Empire TION RATES. Delivered by carrier in funeau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; one vear. postage paid. ut the following rates £15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; ititled to the use for ited to it or not other- Alaska Newspapers, | Americar | the press, radio « | world nday by the Seats Alsask | partme . Presfent | The Chicago altor o e aver | ttirther the frec Editor and Manager Munaging Editor | and peoples. It Business Manager b ment, providing Second Class Matter. | | nto and out of what he wan S15.00 would then move | editing If th he would be told avor if thev will promptly notily ure or irregularity in the delivery So far which occurs i signatories plicable to the mair regulations apply The censorial cri name ‘of urity —— | phrase that will b office, ¥ PRESS may local news published 1411 excent the professionals associated with | THE DAILY A how much of the | ntrol of the censor’s pencil ;w.! ities have ended At the State De- Richard J. Finnegan, publisher of | has drawn up a draft treaty to flow of information among nations | is a brief and simply worded docu- | r the films, realize correspondent can move fr . TOBER 8 . country, travel about inside, sec o \ Jeanne Toner wd talk to people. His copy | e Edna Nelson e out “without censorship, deletion or | e A. F. McKinnon . y delay in transmission, e W. B. Kitk o ! and why . Mrs, O. H. Hatch . i. One pitfall may be the exception | ® Doris Irene Cahill vl the provision that “each of the!® Russell . McGee Al \ake and enforce regulations ap- ® Sylvia Lathrop bl yrespondents relating directly to | ® A f national military security, if such [® © ¢ © © ¢ ¢ 6 6 8.6 & o} equally to all such correspondents B -G TR F R me that can bz committed in the et w2 ANPA CHARGES 1TU | e warped and twisted out of recogni- |tion by every nation that now deplores and man WIIH VIolA'"oN ! handles the {ree press. The only way to protect mili- 7 | tary secrets is at the source. If a correspondent is i tary secrts s st the source 10 4 comopondent . 7 AET ADIEY | AW only way to deal with him effectively is to keep him | away from the source of information. We believe | CINCINNATI, Oct. 8.—\P—The that the clause relating to military security needs R : PR amplification and sharper definition as well, and that ; American News| Fublistiers | it logically belongs in Article IV, relating to free | Association tods rged the In-| transmission of copy, but in Article III, relating to ational . TyPographical,; UUin) free travel within a nation violation of the Labor-Man- 2elations Act of 1947. | No distinction is made in the draft between pre- | rpes were filed with the! transmission and post-transmission reading. We sup- National Labor Relations pose it is not feasible, practically, to specify that gov-! by ston Williams ernment officials shall not even have the authority to k a1l manager of R e, o — read dispatches after they have been sent abroad from : ANPA, who e was ' | a cablehead. The draft treaty appears to assume that |quthorized by NPA Board of they may be so read, even in advance of transmission. | Director We believe the draft might better state specifically ! 1he ANPA is not engaging in Figures recently the Federal Bureau ¢ dispatches shall invariably be transmitted abroad |4 union busting program,” Will-! of Investigation covering the first six months of this from any country before reading by government of- |jams said, and lded { year show that crime is on the decrease in the cities ficials, except in time of declared war. { “This step v taken with ut-! throughout the count increasing in the rural So far as we are aware, there is no reading by most regret and only after every| arcas. And compared with the first six months in|gqyeny officials of a correspondent's dispatches |effort on the part of the ANPA,| 1941, last pre-war year. crime generally is still 12 per (in this country, either before or after transmission |throt conferences Wiih [HeEROS | cent higher in incidence than before the war. How- That is real frecdom of information. We hope this)cutives ol the 1TU, to ““'"“F" ! ever, a continued decline indicates progress new draft treaty will be a vehicle, after the anticipated | relationship in harmony L The crime figures generally show a 7.5 per cent further discussion and revision, that will finally make 1aw of the ‘f“fi:«’;‘ b i increase in rural areas and a 2.3 per cent decr cities, compared with 1946 figures. creased 17.1 per cent in the rural a Larceny and rape both went up the cent in urban areas. 13 per cent in rural districts and only 1.1 per cent in urban for larceny and 3.5 por cent for rape.| It's just Robbery varied only slightly from 1946 figures. Negli- | & L?‘C sun—and blue gent 1w both areas urban. 19 per cities. cent in rural areas and 22.3 The cost of crime prevention continues to come human high, especially in the loss of startling to note that in 1946 there wa increase in the number of police killed in line of duty compared to 1945 (New York Times) Our own country is hind to the foreign (he ?Washinglon Merry-Go-Round (Comtinued jrum Page 1ce your own interests conservation needs,” whiskey men, preduction in aside from any Anderscn warned the “With the big reserves you have hand, you- are heading for certain price war within the dustry if you maintain your rent rat f preduction. So ought to clamp down for your good a in- cur- you own Distillery at this was out ag spokesmen agreed ! true, dogged he.d st a complete moratorium but Potatoes are not a good substi- tute, Engelhard and his colleagues argued, because they are 90 per- ent water. Hen the industry can get only one gallon of alcohol out of five bushels of potatoes, whereas cne bushel o ain - gives p llons of aleohol The distillery leaders insisted that v wanted to do everything »ssible to help the President's feod-conservation program. But wt came to the real pinch e out the use of grain—they balked. 50 inally, after a day-long - sicn the best Luckman could squeeze out of the distillers was a compromise, whereby they banned zll wheat in the m acture of liguor and cut corn and other rains 50 percent Note--actualy, corn and other grains cing to be needed al- most much as wheat, because of the of ¢ feed. U dairy far: the goom- ing will soon require anoth in the price of milk “PRISONER” TRUMAN One Republican barb that always riles the Democr is the char that Presic Truman is ‘pri oner of Lelt Wing and the PAC L& on this charge for itor Bob Kenny Ge head: “Wa for P said It may be s he looks of things, Truman inly bee out on parole the SECRET ARGENTINE-RUSSIAN DEAL Here'y the de USA-USSR voting United Natior as all-import Council Real insky made a Jose Arce, the Ar wher <>y Argentina threw 12 Latin-American yotes hind the Ukrainian Republic fact was that Ru st deal wi del ntine agreed to In nslaughter and murder showed a decrease in s, 6.6 per cent in rural and 108 per cent in | Censors Die Hard so freely open without let or correspondent censorship a vani ase in m- | Burglar as and 2.1 per (Cincinnati an iron |of g An of the McDonald Auto thefts continue to decline as much as made the discovery. What impresses us most fact that his star wea stars have this idiosync per cent in the covery is not the Apparently other s lives. It s 39 per cent Struve has spent | trying to make a Twinkle, Twinkle a small star astronomer their coats usually monplace, and less expens radiating blue star, which is a long time to spend in | "X hed profession NEW REPORTS OF " MYSTERY MISSILE OVER N. SWEDEN M—The | Aftonbladet declared cigar-shaped missiles Enguirer) about three times toe size What makes it different is that overcoat, that is, iron in the form stor: dir T Otto Struve. Ft named Observatory a Davis in as | Oct. 8 about Dr. Struve's dis- | ucaricy 2R ““:“"“" | were seen flying high over the city acy, though | o\ gy qgiksvall, in northern Sweden, are made of something more com- |y oo odny | ve, like hydrogen. But Dr o 1 ) S emitted a sound sim- seven years in isolating this iron- to a motot folse and stres ' fire from the tail, Aftonbladet They came from the north, it star, except one of the Hollywood =l constellation, hold still for :\ picture . | reported, and disappeared at a While we ruminate along the lines of I;nt‘\,“,“ speed in the southwest Science Wonderful?” we cannot help fooling around |° ‘P""O"\ St ol ferie avert with the notion that anything, including a blue-| ‘REPOXS g e O 1 i southern Sweden developed during blooded star, is just a > mad to be wearing an |*S ; that few |overcoat in this kind of ather. | the summer of 1946, but urm-m: %A 44 ‘ = Swedish sources discounted them return; Russla supported ATgenc oo il sl anieiiia el to e fiafter investigalion, SQDSErvers; UGy tin. ~mberst 2 3 bk | gested a possibility that meteors LS membErship. | sia. Ominously he added: “In terms| = = ol N Sccretary M: 1l and the Bri- {0 puccian psychology, the real| VoS pensible for some | tish delegation threw their SUPPOTt yoccaoa that gets across to Rus&ml"')‘““-\‘ { behind India. Result was & nine- |y pipower PR e | ballct deadlock during which the st | i Russian group got 33 votes to 24 i i 3 ey ! | votes for the Anglo-American CARITAL CHAES ! } e 3 Even the Communist Daily Work- | | s R or surprised everybody by criticis- MIN BRI A In the middle of the deadlock, :””‘lhlr piu: SOl Cmi'l_flde a4 " . | the Ara eg s offered Vi-| 7 = 6 | —_— | le Arab delegations offered shinsky used at the United Nations| _ s ol shinsky their 8 votes if Vishinsky & TP T8CC &0 o0 S eon. 1¢| SCARBOROUGH, Eng. Oct. 8—| agreed to vote with the Arabs on . “b“d’ Vishinsky's - Igt press,P— The 177l-ton London carso jestine. For some mysterious R St B Isteamer, Betty Hindley, stru T inaky furned down the Conference as: “dull dnd boring” o Sl el oot England’s TRasDN, VIENIRHY Atledk ¢ : Col. John Gottlieb, wellknown | ™" 0 Itk A TR deal—though it would have meant - I “BLC 0 S oq more | cORSt today, setting off an explo- certain clection of the Ukraine to m::di}analow i b e Todq|sion that killed one crew member the Secu! Council v 1; M and injured several others. | (‘»L : x‘;"» P Three of the injured were tak- RCPY T, , BELL SY’ ATE. snit P o N ¢ ors | FROM THE DIPLOMATIC CCPYR g i {en to a hospital and seven others| POUCH received treatment for shocks. e e 0 s e eveee e g o Assistant Secretary of State Jack o 1y [:‘"(_,n' &§1-stand by “1 n‘}:y_“‘ Peurifoy, who was refused a visa o TIDE = SRSy -."”" ABRVSE H ' ¢ tells friends 4 3 = 3 B r:““*“'(“‘;f‘r|4“:‘2 e ®| LADIES OF RELIEF SOCIETY SE e . fiasion s OCTOBER § o! Of the LDS Church, reserve date ohLes e Sk e Low tide 3:36 am, 17ft. ®!of Nov. 5th for Bazaar and food to Moscow President Truman 1 and d : ; " e High tide 10:28 a.m., 13.4 ft sale adv. 701-t3 is considering the following as suc- ¢ Lofr tidel0 B pm. S8 U cessors to Assistant Secretary =5l & ! 5 ¥ e { % State Willlam Benton: Wall Street ® High tide 22:10 p.m., 148 ft. In Sweden, luncheons frequent- banker Frank Altschul, brother-in- : RS Sl e “‘_“’““__“"l‘"‘ o "‘““_"‘h 204 law of Herbert Lehman: and Tom i ‘Glnnets over thres jof ARG Finletter, head of Air Policy i Committce, an A-1 man. . . British ! inte nce reperts still indicate that Russia’s Foreign Minister | Molotov will stage a dramatic ap- Vot i pearance at the United Nations la- ;| pontile ter this month, makir surprise 4 Talk idly mand for immediate world dis- 9. Bolivian aimament. Aiter this, according to ya ponomn s uncensor dispatches, Molotov will 13. Kind of crab timate 7 3 5 14, And not Mohammedan head for the Big Four Foreign 15 individual e Mini conference in London l]‘; mnlni"w'“}mma fi ;fl:;l"‘ :{;-‘K!;As! v he will come up with a new ‘navigation 42, Sodium P! for unifying Germany - M:f:""”d' umner Welles will make an im- rational portant address at the Nation As- 3t scciates dinner in the Waldorf- oured Astoria Hotel next weck Robert R Soltion of Yesterday's Puzzle Butle the big Minneapolis ship- -l(1>"-\3;? AR builder, now U. S. Ambassador to " thors " Minove may become Ambassador DOWN Sec ary of State 1. The southwest M 1 has received a letter from WA Wis ma Paul Porler reminding him th ek S while the freedor train is tou . Jail the country preaching our basic More tenuous freedoms, the State Departmer . Playing cards trampling on one of t . Number not by from the permitt RUSSIANS FEAR 1 POWER r a with r Poli luncheor the v group derwrite bold, vigorou Corps Ch without a re, Carl in- Ger Spaatz trong dustry rong commercial tem country will lose its ir power.' This was seconded by Commerce Secretary Averell Harriman, who Building Open | Jix 8 | Press . Plan of actign | Healthy | Whirls i | Mongolic tribesman Bouquet Reject dis- dainfully . Hard wood | . Hollows Rob 33. Pertaining to the stars two Hurg Culfe meter Takes & chalr Indigo plant Cease Body of & church Colored 50. Fuss | wl ad LASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA fectly good t T ELLIS AIR ) L - | 20 YEARS AGO [ mueins i b OCTOBER 8, 1927 J. D. Van Atta, proprietor of the Silver Fox Barber Shop, poet of local fame, had the following “ad” in The E A BARK FROM THE SILVER F “The Silver Fox Barber Shop Where Many are learning to stop. Get trimmed up in fine style Walk out with a Big Smile Allen Calkins arrived Tuesday who was a re working hard three in a Including Mr. Lenney Hall We're located pper Front Where everything is cle Come along folks don't be late, We're prepared to go the gait.” Si on n and nes Earle Hunter, manager of the Ni Hawks orchestra, announced that an addition had been made in the nnel of the orchestra. Ray Moore had been signed as a piano playe Earle Hunter, who had ombone. Other members were Jack Burford and Albie been playing the piano, was to play the Bill Vale, M. Ayersman, Windy Walker Torvinen, C., trolling boat of Frank Miller, was wrecked to received by Frank A. Boyle, A. Michaelson of Taku Harbor reported of the water and a man on the beach The Viola in Stephens Passage, United States Commissic seeing two masts sticking out He wasn't able to rescue the man because of the weather. gasboat cor word Weather: Hig 5; low, 43; rain o et et e e GG s 2 { Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon ————l BT ST S O R S LSO WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: bpuas of a painting, a wall, a signature as being DEFACED, a person’s face as being DISFIGURED. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Piquant. Pronounce pe-kant, E as in as in AN unstressed, accent first syllable PEAS, A OFTEN MISSPELLED: Celebrate; three E's. SYNONYMS: Leisure (noun), idleness, holiday, spare time. 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: NONCOMMITTAL; indicating nejther consent nor dissent; not express- ing a decided opinion. *My answer to such a question must not be non- cominittal.” e \ { ETIQUETTE % ROBERTA LEE Q. When a young is it all right for him to walk between them? A. Formerly it was fer the man always to walk on the curb side when accompanied by two women. However, now it is in per- e for him to walk between them. should the carving be done at the man is customa Q. When giving a formal di. table? A. No; it should be done in the the carving may be done at the table. kitchen. At an informal dinner, Q. Should children be taught to rise when an older person enters | the room? A. Yes, and they should remain standing until the older person is seated L S EES IS IR NI SIS P G S of the e an area of more than 1. What seven States Union have 100,000 square miles? 2. How did the wedding ring originate? 3. What is the tallest building in the world? 4. What is the chief organ of speech? 5. What is the medical term for smallpox? ANSWERS: Tezas, California, Montana, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and ncient times when men shackled their women. Wedding rings are used as symbol of this shackling 3. The Empire State Building in New York City. 4. The larynx 5. Variola. DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petershurg and Wrangell With ccnnections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and 3eattle FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 18_91—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1947 * The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS MRS. M. BURKE 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 CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "THAT BRENNAN GIRL" 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! § sl | GENERAL REPAIR WORK waixing along the street with two girls, | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, VETERANS OF RFIGN WARS Taku Post No. 6350 Moets first and third Fridays. Post Hall, Sew- ard St Visiting Com- rades Welcome H. 8. GRUENING. Com- mander; J. C. BRADY, | Adsutant. l You'll Always Get a Better Deal in Fur Styles and Values at | | Martin Victor Furs, Inc. i | Swedish Fur Crattsmen | Three Generations ‘ | ‘sames C. Cooper, CPA BUSINESS COUM LOR Specializing in Corporation- -Municinal and | Trust Accounts e — | The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery | PHONE 704 i HAY, GRAIN, COAL ! and STORAGE (CALIFORNIA | Grocery and Meat Market | 473 — PHONES — 371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices for STEVENS® LADIES' —MISSES’ | READY-TO-WEAR seward Street ‘Third He: Alaska Music Supply | Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplics Phoue 205 Second and Seward | HEINKE GENERAL | REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Oil Burne: Blacksmith Work Phone 204 929 W. i2th St | (Warfield's Drug Stere | | (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM k Huichings Economy Market i | ! | Chcice Meats At All Times | PHONES 553-—-92—95 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 '| Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805- 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Window—Auto—Plate —GLASB IDEAL GLASS C0. | 121 MAIN STREET “ DON ABEL PHONE 633 BARANOF ALASKA’S FINEST HOTEL EAT IN THE BUBBLE ROOM Special Dinner 5to8 P. M. $2.50 TIMELY CLOTHES UNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men | R.W.COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymoutli—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks Lucille’s t-2auty Salon Specializing in all kinds of Permanent Waves for all Textures of Hair HAIRCUTTING Phone 492 2nd and Franklin 1947 0. 147 MOUNT JUNEAU LODG SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple \buginning 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, Sac- reta le‘in-q; for VouTfl?hj EU'V"!'STP‘“- GRIFFIN Co 5: 'llql/u_n('a[fl‘/wrirely—( “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 FREE DELIVERY Juneau | — "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. .HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is a Profession ARCHIE B. BETTS Public Accountant L Auditor Tax Counsclor Simpson Bldg. Phone 757 FOR Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. Phone 146 HOME GROCERY Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Alaska Laundy CITY DRY CLEANERS PHONE 877 “Quality Dry Cleaning” ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788 142 Willoughby Ave.