The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 15, 1947, Page 4

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nn,—-y FOUR EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY NATIONAL than the unmarried; veterans with children top all 1 I‘ mlur() he campus averages for marks and honors. ey Not only are their academic records better, Mr. Tead p ut, but the veterans are more critical | Alasks nd skeptical of “dogmatic utterances and authori- - President Vice-President aneger Editor anager attitudes on the ps DOOY of tc revi: art of the teaching caliber their tarian teachers.” They and insist that As a result many lecture notes and to meet the challenge brought to th mature, al attitude will are quick to detect their instructors be s Matter. | Professors ara now seeking war by this are s for $1.50 per month; $15.00 campus the That higher education seems cert: educ rt, earnest young men effect -service men hat i have a salutary The e on in their are ing ation an wraging devolopment democ for the continuance st Red Weapon 1411 (New York French Communists 1 politfeal i Times) The are adopted they have icolat Ru Her a national program themselves the servile nform Thi; threat to it is now that ba reported have lationist policy n other word: themselves from everybody but forth t can bhardiy profess to have ince. They have proclai of Moscow and the Com- to ia or Fra e ling fact in the Communist Both in France and Italy ind oven and must be met on ined to prove it the in the French Assem- ench currency in the The Red Devuties $o’ obviously b ynomy, would hardly have Moscow had not inter- re bloc <ion of F the matt Byt internal ec of debate if the introdu would clinch bitterly opposed it ficial to Frenct and 1,750,000 f ition's campuse yems, overburdenec ir ble pressure rk City how ence lesome influe > report cod Tk in ral rets n important T and motivation. I Y married veteran ke The Washingfon maint 10nthly red t been rmer With the it a burden all reports the the cla y Graphic that are more aler gnize the on Writing Ordway Board of Higher the on the are ierry-Go-Round (Continued from Page Ore} UNDER organizations stud it night to He studied in idered & th R « e Labor 1l 12 Le M C G W 10LisE - w ecticut 1 D mun In i § Divisi PAPER MONEY FOR GERMANY € . B i d F I wi 12 dow cked in ‘The Tudor for Government w paint R s I'HE DOME rom even the lcwer 12nc¢ cord number have hing rooms in ever ated. men ve Ru ed accession of econcmic Communists opbenly their own country. As France to enjoy the trial strenzth she will' derive from the Sarre. Hence the French line up with Russia and against in their frantic opposition to are compelled to does not want union witk to continue Wi the Marshall Plan, they zents of the Kremlin i Indeed, they compelled ven both in France and Italy have left 8 powerful weapon. That is the threat of armed insurrection and civil They are em- ploying this th: nized Red ric e in both countr ; in Ttaly and more tentative Fran e liberation the Com- munist accept governments of France d to cooperate in the appear a farther hem are to go e rant last two year This fall of student more Were bec promis na cffort. Whe ey ere fo t iJ and univeysities are vet- ' At T rt. When they were found to be sabot is effort and infiltrating all official year ends it is estimated 5 ) i the | Services 1 disloy ~cy were incontinently Wil 0 =0n MR kthrown, out of the ! Italy was encour- crowded the clg aged to take similar mmunists fully taff, put an almost ' expected jto force ough pressure libraries and ' from the Labor frct trol. That now laborateries the hist been sroom they America assets had better o ' ¢irg cward Rear m cer J Jr commander th fiett Field lif r GI's censid- ed Reeve 1 the brassiest WYRIGHT, 1947, B YNDICATE. iNe) PEARSON TO EUROPE ep st hand the Jf higher educa- seems highly unli se and not aced on the colleges, | Very likely even in Ital hout West- veterans are doing a | €F Europe reveal an ebb! tide in Communist influ: ence. Far from attend- 3 £t MeEhar Thus the Reds are reduced to volishing their last are setling RIBNEr i gegpon, which is ci rife w0t afraid of in the November is- 'neing in a minority, for th eli armed and dis- Tead, chairman of the ciplined. But the question s ‘to whether they Education, presents have not started their Wave of the Future too late rans have been a As they have weakened politically, resistance campus. The them has coale and strengthe reir etk better marks than 8ré Enown, their purpose is at 1 4 ‘ acknowledged. 1 es are more anxious to do | kRO ed ur re ken on their own ground. In urope, cou with buttr 2 Russian armies star Europe is still free to control its | them d'ets ing by an value of > in their favor At are ea Bu interesting to note own destinv. Apparently, if it gets our economic help, academic records | it can do so. of the windows to prevent passers- xade one oi their mo ortan by from seeing in nd unigue gesiures of friendship yeial guarcs trom inc to Burcpe through the endship Ty Shepastcii Wash- Train. And he will endeavor to ngton, and 12 plainclothes men ferort first hand on the distribu- : St E AP and tion of the food and the effect it e wving also kept constant has on European people. h over the printing joo. i s n the after- e sl of the Foreign Ministers 5. WasHNGtoR e large Conference and the pros ts that heets, There the Bureau of ‘¢ Marshall Plan has for bring- pronting and Engraving cut the FiabILy RO, and numbered it R o A : Se it sty arin / Alaska Empire ng jobs almost. loaked out when DCEIDNINE toward the end of this b" Magiali, had ¥ as long over- e ate Police NOTICE au Post No. of Jun The membe spent eral hours 4, The Ameri Depart- him, a Phila- ment of Al its regular meet- delphia newspaper got wind of the ing on January 26, 1948, will vote thorize the I tory but never was quite able to on a proposal {o wrack it down gion Building Association to gran When the currency finally ;asement over a portion of Lot nished, it was shipped to Brook- in Elock No. 4, approximately feetsby one hundred feet in in three Pennsylvania Railroad cars, under a guard ot dimension | police, plus special agents publ Dec. 12, 1947 | rmy Criminial Investiga- publica Jan. 16, 1948 fon. They never let it heir s MERRY-GO-ROUND A BRnas o k: H g Expeditor Woods has 1. Rocky peak gth ) the Tanforan Race 4. Flower 33, AL ot San Francisco. Al- Lot 3. Handle owners wer g, /12 Malb heverakn roughly & 7 . To one side housing priorities A6 which veterans, a recent ¢ mits Tanforan " Peer Gynt 5. Ignited L Lovded estate fayor I now, pe of a lord THE DAILY /\MS‘\A EM'”IRI;—IUNEAU ALASKA e ‘the Alaska | .- G. H. Skinner 1 Alabama WARRIORS | FACE JAIL Foothall Team Is Chargedji with Betting on lself in Title Game or a /(l\l‘(’(‘ n l\‘( R. C. Mize { Alaska bound for them. They were weeks. Wallis S. Gec Cold Storage Com, 1 and President of t {the Admiral Line ;,n inted Secretary | | | i | | and ex-teammate will DECEMBER 15, 1927 with the Alaska Road Commission, leave. He was 1 months' visit Washington annd two daughter Seattle. in to rge, President and General Manager pany, was el he Juneau Chamber of Commerce. HONOLULU, ec. 15— @—The Weather: High, 25; low, 20; snow. star halfback of the Pacific Coast | & League professional football cham plon Hawalian Warriors, 13 team- ally Lessons in Enghs L mate J in District Court today to re of betting on them- selves in a game that brought them the title Halfback Melvin luly, the ague's gainer, who was valuable play harged with kind of sick.” Abreau, Hono- OFTEN leading ground med his team’s the others “betting on an Lk contest, conviction of which carries a maximum penalty of $1,000 fine and a year in jail. The 15 huski ared at police syliable WORD STUD {increase our v DRASTIC; acting for drastic nd subdued | 1ds ranging 1 made bor Saturd ) from $50 to $100 cach Detective Captain Eugene Ken- i n Tuesday, ing they signed the charge: pooled $6,70¢ WORDS OFTEN MISU say, MISPRONOUNCED 0 1s in ON, E as in ME unstressec OFTEN MISSPELLED SYNCNYMS: Malicious, malign, Y: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Today's word: “Such conditions call | ED: Do not s “that he felt slightly ill.” Promenade. Apostrophe; observe the malignant, malevol bulary by mastering one word each day. vigorously: extreme; effective, action.” FTIQUETT / |20 YEARS AGO i oupins | 4 bt | Miss Venitia Pugh had been appeinted a clerk in the office of the £ ® Clerk of the U. S. District Court ° DECEMBER 15 . e : gl : Officers for the coming year were clected at the meeting of the ° Jiny ¢ v o tern Star held the previous evening as follows: Mildred Martin, .o Bonnie L. W o Worihv Matren; Ralph Martin, Worthy Patron; Maybe:ie George, Asso . Dcnna Jean Jewett o |ciate Matron; Alice Brown, Secretary; Mary Sutton, Treasurer; Lilly ° R. B. Mclvor o | Burford, Conductress; Jessie Keller, Associate Conductress; Anna Web- . rence Knizht o | ster, Trustee for two vears; Lottie Spickett, Trustee for one year. ° Emily Pearson . “BIT IR © J. Giovanetti '! To attend the Democratic Divisional Convention in Ketchikan, J. . e 1J. Connors, John W. Troy and Albert Wile left the previous evening on ® © 0 0 ¢ 0 0 s 0 00 0 left on the Alaska Ellen and Dorothy During the Christmas holidays they (‘xp(‘clt‘d‘ {to be in Middleton, Oregon, where they were to visit relatives and where {Ralph Mize, attending Oregon State College in Corvallis, planned to join | ;0 to California after Christmas to spend several | of left spend the holidays with his wife and | Jon a two months’ leave. He was to ays wi M, L {children in Salt Lake City and later expected to go south to his home in | | Oregen and California, | on the | | | | the Juneau | cted Chairman of the Board of Directors | B. H. Howard, of | s elected V:ce-President. Frank Boyle was x'c-nx)—| Pronounce A as in AH, principal accent on last PHE. ent. \V L. CORDON Charles said that he feit prom-e-nad, et et e i e e el e et following a dance, and one is not hungry? Let us ()BLRTA LEE 1| e . et et ) is it all right | written on one's card. SEEDIbEL oh If el 1d cne do when with a crowd, e Bnnt{l:fii W 8 Z1- {ihe others wish to stop somewhere to eat, Kennedy said thev bet A C s crder scmething very light end make an attempt lead the Bulldogs by at eating 1t 12 half and would win the game Q. V 1 calling cn a friend and she is not at home, by 14 poin They won the first]to leave a message? part of the bet, he added, but the A. Yes. “Scrry to have missed you" may be bulk of their money wast lost when Q. Is it all right for a gairl the final score was 7 to 6 present? Kennedy, emphasizing there was : no evidence of bribe, spent most of | the afternoon with other detectives | viewir motion pictures of the gamz Coach Keith Molesworth = heard about the betting incident two days after the game and laid the story A, Yes; this is often done. ettt e e e e o At et | LOOK and LEREE Yo before the Warrior's Board of Di-| 1. Who was the first President of the United States to wear long rectors, The dir called in the |trousers? police. 2. How does a pontoon bridge differ from other bridges? pRAs! 1 3. Who was the “Merry Monarch” of England? IS PASSED { 4. What is the approximate depth and width of the Grand Canyon? Bunclm-l! noluln, Dec. 15— 5. What is the opposite of the musical term “staccato”? (P— Ffteen members of the l ANSWERS Hawaiian Wa = pro football 1. Thomas Jefferson. team were convicted of bet- | 2. It is supported by flat-bottomed boats. ting on their Pacific Coast 3. Charles IT (1630-85) ?"“““" _""_:"“p""“)"p it | 4. About a mile deep, and from eight to ten miles wide at the top. and all were fined. ¢ ota 2 The fines totaled $675. None 0 TURR G was centenced to jail. The maximum sentence possible was $1,000 fine each and one year jail. Judge Griffith cepted the players’ reply to his question: anyone here who pleads guilty? After a short recess to hear a few details of the case, he proncunced the f nes. Wight ac- silence in “Is there not 04 v| “Hlimz b of its ra e build:ngs Ed Pritchard of ju Voo Fepast Mark of I Eentucky, the man who once kept . kewct disdamn- " omission = 10 Chief Justice Fred Vinson liberal, s o ! has declined to head up new Y 4 ,'U g compy Justice Department bur to ining to 49, Befor Solution of Saturday's Puzzle protect civil libertic There 15 .g oyt 8V o ALk ke 2. ©-spot 51. Cuckoollka 56. Put forth P a hot row in the Navy over the ap- i Of the voice bird ikt arant '€ pointment of a new Deputy Chief ° Nesative o EEEowR ) aval Opers 8,.¥ mended Soft mineral b, th VY v Adm Medley thur W. Radford, a good mah but Gave back one who made the mistake of op- ican ish )osing the Army-Navy merger: So B Castaim he be d the White House v:\x:m-rn inside ad, the inr ¢ Employer i Denote fed or game a4 Ancient Roman X gutherer t He when will the 7. Prepare for " the press 30. Wild animal COMMERCIAL 0 * Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska H. BABSTEN CAPITOL THEATRE to 5 and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “THE WICKED LADY" Y eacral Tax--.12¢ per Person :30 DAY or NIGHT—Phone Douglas 16 The B. M. Behrends SAVINGS as a pait-up subscriber o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the 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! Douglas Plumbing & Heating Co. 0il Burrers - Appliances - Gasoline OPEN DAILY (Except Sunday) 8:3 N |81 1 and | | i | l 1 | i | i | | | | | he= fiance an cngagement’ ' i MONDAY, DECEMBER 15 VETERANE OF FOREIGN WARS Tuku Post No. 5559 Moets first and third Fridays. Post Hall, Sew- ard St. Visiting Com- rades Welcome. H. 8. GRUENING. Com- mander: J. C. BRADY, Adiutant. You'll Always Get a Better Deal in Fur Styles and Values at Mariin Vicior Furs, Inc. Swedish Fur Craftsmen for Three Generations sames C. Cooper, CPA EUSINESS COUNSELOR Specializing n ) Corparation--Municival and Trust Accounts The Ervin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery PIIONE 764 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE CALIFORNIA Grozery and Meat Market 478 —. PHONES — 371 High Quality Fcods at Moderate Prices e e, g STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third ‘Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phoue 204 Second and Seward HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, Gil Burper Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPATR WORK Phune 204 ¥29 W. 12th St |Warfield's Drag Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM Hulchmgs Economy Market Choice 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. PIONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Window—Auto—Plate—GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO. 121 MAIN STREET DON ABEL PHONE 633 BOGGAN Flooring Coniraclor Laying—Fimshing Oak Floors CALL 209 (abinet and Mill Work Open Evenings 6 to 9 H.P. MIDDLETON 336 West Third — off Wil- loughby at Ellen Grocery TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men R. W. COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymoutki—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks Lucille's breauty Salon Specializing 1n all kinds of Permanent Waves for all Textures of Hair HAIRCUTTING Phone 492 2nd and Pranklin 1947 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 GECOND end 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 D. m, Visiting brothers wel- come. VICTOR POWER, Ex- alted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Sec- retary CHARLES . GRIFFIN Co' 1005 SECOND AVE - SEATILE 4 - Elior 5325 N = '/pq/]/dd'aéw_/tm ely “SMILING SERVICE" Berl'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 Auditor Tax Counselor Simpson Bldg. Phone 757 FOR Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wencit Complete Automotive Service MT. JUNEAU SALES & SERVICE 9209—12th St. PHONE 659 Specialists in Radiator Work The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Sheif HARDWARE Remington Typewriters i SOLD and SERVICED by ! J.'B. Burford & Co. M “Qur Doorstep I’ 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 il by name Junean Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. Phone 146 HOME GROCERY Home Liquor Store—Tel. 639 American Meat — Phone 38 ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Alaska Laundy CITY DRY CLEANERS PHONE 877 “Quality Dry Cleaning” e ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788 142 Willoughby Ave.

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