The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 26, 1948, Page 4

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)

P.\};l | OUR Daily Alaska Empire Pu Te except Sunday by the President - President Editor and Manager - Managing Bditor Business Manager s Second Class Matter. S1.50 per month; 00 ¢ rates: ronths, in advance, $7.50; ey will promptly notify egularity in the delivery or 1f allure c: & News Offfer. 802, Business Office, 37d. MEMBEE O ASSOCIATED PRES he A Piess 1y ecch 1y entitled to the use for reubl ews @lpntches ereaited to it or not ether- wive credited in thus paper wnd also the locsl news published Alaska Newspapers, 1411 BUTLER BILL HEARING Department opposition to legislation the authority of that department nd r in Alaska is’ not he 10w considering Senator Butler's bill to c ail this authority, remains to be seen out ment of the tered by the expand t in pointing K proposed pulp Indian aboriginal 1] have been enoug laims to companies from bidding on tablishing huge pulp mills. T pulp mil the terms of the Forest Service contracts for the of timber, would employ Southeast Alaska from fishing, the pulp industry \ey continue h now is thousands’ of resident work the Indians, whose only would find steady employment But instead, misled by their I to push their aboriginal claims and t t the velopment of an industry that wo penefit all of Alaska. This is done in the face of recent court de- cision which hold against the aborigina) rights theory incon de- Civil Oceupation Washington Pc The long overdue transfer of authority in Ameri- secupied Germany frem the Army to the Depart- of State, now scheduled to take place about July s essential groundwork for the integration of the conguered area with the rest of western Europe. T! stumbling block which has made such integration impossible was the duality of direction inherent in Department control of polics the enclave, rmany, while the te Departn was directing in respect of the continent as a whole. No unt of liaison could make the two. lines of ority mesh. sy he has discharged with hig de 1 | fr¢ inning of the American occ General Dwight D. Eisenhower, General Mc 1iev and finally a ider of American occupation forces and U s Military Governor for Germany. He h ic gratit not only of his own countrymen ude | but of the beaten people it became his task 1 to gover: e has discharged this task | humanity firmness and, especially in difficult dealings with the other occupying powers, has shown immense patience, resourcefuliness and di- plomacy | It is no disparagement of General Clay's splendid in Germany to that he now needs to b. say r sponsibility toward the people ! come more and more elioration of their mi r was so effective as to mak b, T4 1 that the losers in the war civing prefernce over the liberated. G ral hort shrift to France's views concerni h2 her demands for a lion’s share of the | cutput. Plainly there is no longer room il pecial pleading if the European eéconomy is to e d. The major premise cf the Mg il Plan & he resources of the content w be employed to the best general advantage S { national frontier If this is to be achieved, there must be an overall direction of American policy which will treat Ge any as a factor, an essential factor in Eurcpean recovery but not as a special and dis »ject of rehabi n efforts in itself. The Dep: is the logical agency for the job Orville Wright New York Times) Part of the greatness of Orville Wright—the t man to make a sustained flight in a heavier-tha d nor did he a first was that he never aspired to be, 1 he was machine preten ) be, anythir more mechanic with i . Which is not to detract one whit frem hi e in the history of aviation He and his brother Wilbur were those nec ry people in the scheme of things who tr: of others into realit In doing that they made probably a more significant contributicn even than the dream- ers. They built scientifically sound plane; they flew it It is impossible write of either brother sep- most as close as if they had been was more responsibe for the worlds first practicable airplane because they did not know all the credit to Wilbur in an Tk twin: development ¢ ere arately identical will ki Orville ¢ no one ever themse article he once wrote Encyclopaedia Britannica ater his brother's dea 1912, But that was more an expression of his personality than an objective recital of fact. Tt was a flip of a coin and a twenty- seven-mile wind th ve Orville instead of Wilbur the distinction of making the first successful flight at 1903. After his brother’s death 17 nade no further significant contribution to | Kitty Hawk on Dec Orvill the science of flight The bare bones of the story Wright and their invention is known: how they began with kites, then built bicycles which gave them a knowledge of metal construction; tested the theories of Maxim and Langley and Chanute and Lillienthal as to flight, discarding some and retaining only those of the Brothers they were able to prove sound; learned the science of | piloting through painful experiments with hand- launched gliers; built themselves a light engine and hamn ed out propeller and then put the two on a plane of their own design and construction and flew | it on thaz historic date for fifty-nine seconds and 852 | feet. Just what inner fire it was that they possessed, that kept them at their task when many others con- fessed failure, neither was articulate enough to expres 1d Wil- Orville Wright lived to see the thing he bur had evolved become an unparalleled instrument of destruction. In 1943 he said that he deplored the but that he felt about | “That is.” he | destruction that it was causin the airplane much as he did about fire. continued, “T regret ail the terrible damage caused by it is good for the hum race that | overed how to start fires and that we! somecne | yesterday rHE DAILY ALASK = = =5 . o {o . . ° ° . ° I . L] N mer . N N ° ° ° . . . . . 39 PASSENGERS ARE FLOWN WEDNESDAY BY ALASKA COASTAL Alaska Coastal made flights yes- terday and carried 39 passengers as follow Jun « ka: George Sundborg, Lt. Milton, T-5 Steele, Pvt. Mar- tin, M. W. Goding, C. Aiken, A. Lawrence Sitk Juneau: Ruth Brandes, lvin, L. Aiken, A, Law- equah: Mr. Chern- P A EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA' | poere i Tulsequah to Juneau: F. McPher- Juneau to Ketchikan: S. B. Hill- man, J. D 3 Ketch E. M, Kain- | claine Petersburg to Juneau: Eldor Lee. Metl: to Juneau: Joe Hay- la Bolton, Frank Hay- d ward Hood Bay to Juneau: Albert Mat- thews: #<Juneau to Pelica ton, Percy Johns- Elizabeth Pad- Charles Pad- o Juneau ian Paddock to Hoonah Moy, i nm Junea Mo, Bay to Henry n Jr ohnnie F Hoonah Moy, Henry un Juneau: Mrs. H Hargrove Juneau han: Gustavus James Angoon to Juneau: Nadja Gamble Tenakee to Juneau: L. J. Whistler Jimmy Whistler, Willlam Greer. - INCORPORATIONS Two their to Gustavus: G. Leutke- to Juneau: Albert V concerns filed Incorporation of Terri- non-profit Articles of in the office torial Auditor Frank A. .Boyle The Spiritual Assembly of Baha'is of Anchorage, Alaska, religious organization, was formed by Betty Becker, Florence B. Gr Evelyn G. Huffman, Mrs Lundquist, Mrs. Helen M. Robin- son, Wilbur A. Robinson, Janet W, the a Stout, Verne L. Stout and Frances en, Mina | THURSDAY !fif YEARS AGO Lttt i FEBRUARY 26, 1928 | s, Katherine Heoker slipped on an icy sidewalk and sprained her from THE EMPIRE kle. She was resting at her home ! The music department of the the p Dorothy Bakke, Irene 1 Chase, George H: Lundstrom, Masie Rogers, A. VanMavern arrived from the south. Dept and U recommend tc suceessor. him a 1d L. M. Carrigan, local traveling men, on, Paul H. Doy and S| H. B Pr Haines 36; misting. s e i et e S low Weather report: High, Dailv Lessons in English % . corpox § s ; WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Morgan replaced Sanders as editor of the par Say, “Morgan SUCCEEDED Sanders as editor.” CoTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Celluloid. Pronounce the U as in USE, nct as in UP. OFT MISSPELLED: Meager, or meagre; observe the EA. SYNONYMS: Unwilling, av reluctant, disinclined, indisposed WORD STUDY: “Use 2 word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase cur vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word AUGMENT: to enlarge or increase in size, amount, or degrees. augments a stream.” “Anger augments a dispute.” o e i e e | MODERN FTIQUETTE Zonerea voe § ———— will extricate him, isn't the 1 A. No. It is better The only justification for a injury, or give happiness Q. How can cne overcome extreme company of a group of persons? A. Really the only remedy is to think less about one’s self, devoting ne’s entire attention to the other persons present Q. Would it be all right for a debutante te wear a pin¥ gcwn ¢ her coming-out party ? A. White is the most appropriate color. lf in a predicament where a “white lie” Jjustified? tell the truth and face the consequences. hite lie” would be to protect another from the person who is burdened self-consciousness when in the B et et e et e bl e i LOOK and LEAPN :‘,b_ GORDON 1. What famous document declares that “all men are created free and equal”? 2. Which State’s land is more than 85 per cent in farms? 3. Who wrote “The Comzdy of Errcr”? 4, How is seventy-cne written in Roman num s? 5. What does the Latin pl > “ad interim” mean? ANSWERS 1. The Declaration of Independence. 2. Jowa. 3. Shakespeare. 4. LXXI. 5. “In the meamntime.” | acquainted with Herbert Hoover, al- so a Stanford Alumnus. .His bio- No one has more vigorously or more persistently | have iearned to put fires to many 1t | L. Wells, . : sought this transfer of authority than Gen. Lucius | is not ‘he ., that the Wrights invented that is | The Kodiak Bills Club, of Ko- g Ry, of the BN\ LIS TELEIear Clay, who, once it is accomplished, will relinguish a at faul diak, was formed by Max C. La- Dles |n New York was published in 1929. Other books - > = - — = — | Lande, Jorgen Frederickson and included a “Reporter at Armaged- . ;-distance telephone about the b i Fa e vntil ol Joseph Morino for fraternal pur-! e, Ghn.” “A House of Mysters,” “Sighe "le waShlngwn distance telephone about the b’ out of mo il ‘!\ i NEW YORK, Feb. 26.—(P—Will| lights of Manhattan” and “Christ or court martial of Lieut. Vemen new building progra auces | - gpae. | Trwin, 74, author of some 30 volumes Mars.” Meny-GO-Roufld Lubbock, Texas, Who was. new planes ] of fiction and sion-fiction, magazine| - Sl iy t of being drunk and 2 Coordination beiween military|® © o e e ® e o e o o e editor and World war 1 correspon-. ST. PATRICXS DAY SHOOT et ully striking an enlisied and commercial air systems: NOTICE e dent, died yesterday. Cathclic Cburch Parish Hall, 3y DREW PEARSON tangling the count ai — e| In the 1920's, the newsman became March 17 816 6t “You can't puolish that re- establishing an independent agency|® Yvonne's Dress Shop will be o — - - s W SN I CASI (Continued from Page One) monstrated General Whit to control -air safety; unification|® closed until further notice. © pmm—————————— e o ST TR Sorry, but we intend to - of Armed Services aviation | e Payments due Yvonnes e aratively mild one, submit- lish it The Congressional committee | @ Dress Shop should be mailed e E L L I s A I R IJ I N E s i ard Clark of North B whese authority?” chai-| blast bbth the Army and | ® to Fern Williams, Box 1859, ® ; I8 was' oieel kot the O for failure to achieve air unifica-|e Juneau, Alaska. 819 3t ® DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN umeng the delegations for By the authority of the con- | ton. In fact unification, it willje e e -6 _8:;8 e ¢ o o o - _ B o s e om0 {0 i ol way, sconnd | e via Petersburg and Wrangell me heral, which says that the / the corner. | Empire Wantaas 1or Best Results s s o - ican people have a right & J i D i With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg. A meeting the voice Of gpo " o iie martial ik Y Convenient afternoon departures, at 1:00 P. M. rootin' tootin’ John peoviuit o enlisted ‘ I o[o] 3 . ie D 5 was T Toudest| it O i oR v;Af} | FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 would look into the natter LiLIA LA - = A produced the facts nely Elo thing you kncw,” Rangin Lieutenant Brook m :‘fi z! Congre wili be flooded Feb, 8 had struck Pvt. James 46, Re 18 PE . ) 18 R. Snowball of F‘.J:\t \\l,,nr : l‘xI::x. g o MO |O|R lsgl_over Ha" a cemury 0' Bankmg_lg48 A Rankin opposed group who at that time was in civilian SiP S'S]| ticn tedly calling atten- clothe Lieutenant Brooks was _E ET ton to personal fight | acquitted on the | it e AM * for southern principles When'| thought Private Snowball was. tak- BE he saw that group resolution | j preperty, and also be- :J! would be adopted in spite cause of the Lieutenant’s own ten- L2 Th B M B h he raised a for year record in the Army ?.. ejs e ® @ l’ends sted men re preser a the i 0 e e Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle Banl‘ after Gossett Gene White having DOWN n which by | been challenged by this column 1. Clen e by e searding the i o Oldest Bank in Alaska k w the fact t eeded to rerson h- : light | scocp thi hing to all R Pt Jlar ©s0- other newspape ith news of i i COMMERCIAL SAVINGS o opesed m v PROGRAM atic party r!.x enter- y-wis2 Senator O. Brew- - — - canc st aine epublicar 5 La g o . % R is taking 5. W \ n' w. Mcannv no chance when Advisor andidate Truman I thar ARMY CENSORSHIP Army commander United ~ Press seem to rea tha pare a man, but Brew- s over. For General | ste able to borrow Jim Stre- hur still an Associated Press censorship from Internation 1 American They are expected and write « big publicity break, Mac ccmmittee will recom- Japanese And Fort Riley, Kan A huge 5-year avi pro- other I. D. White at gram, building U. 8. air power to first think that war- such a peak it should obviate the | tane cen: prevailed ne sity for universal military General was queried b ning Old planes will be eing left out of the Congressional Committee pre- recommendations. ng the report provision merchants Congealed wer-Lytton acter erpret: called i services and in- al city act of 1 between’ us of tha Blue Grass . Anger as a pait-up suoscriber 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 IWO TICKETS to see: GEORGE BRYSON Yeceral fax ---12¢ per Person PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATGH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! e —————— T ———— S ————— | i | | | | ; l i | | | | | Juneau Public Schools gave a concert | Jrevious afternoon and among the participating were Edna Riendeau, | Xenia Kashevaroff, ! all, Robert Waggener, Jeanette Stewart, Duncan | . Edward Mize, Lilian Peterson, Ben Stewart and Alice Mer-| i | | 3 | U. 8. Marshal W. M. Eddy had passed away at Douglas Marshal Albert White announced that Douglas citizens could | | | “Rain | s first and third ays. Post Hall, Sew- ard St. Visiting Com- rades Welcome. H. 8. GRUENING, Com- | mander; WILLIAM H | SHERLOCK, Adjutant You'll Always Get a Better Deal § in Fur Styles and Values at Martin Viclor Furs, Inc. Swedish Fur Craftsmen for Three Generations HOMER €. MURPHY, N.D. NATUROPATHY i Medicated Steam Baths Herbs Phone Blue 650 10th and E “The Erwin Feed Co. Office tn Case Lot Grocery PIIONE 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE CALIFORNIA Grozery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 3871 High Quality Poods at Moderate Prices STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third Alaska Music Supply| Artbur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos-~Musical Instruments 1 and Supplies Phoue 206 Second and Seward HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP {ing, Plumbing, Oil Burner Blacksmith Werk GENERAL REPAIR WORK 929 W. 12th St Phone 204 Warfield's Drug Stere (*ormerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM 'Hutchings Econemy Market Choice Meais At All Times PHONES 553—92—95 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Feurth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 138 Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Window—Auto—Plate—GLASS IDEAL GLASS C0. 121 MAIN STREET DON ABEL PHONE 633 N BOGGAN Flooring Contractor Laying—Finishing Oak Floors CALL 209 Casler’s Men's Wear Formerly SABIN'S Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage — o e TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing Complete Outfitter for Mer R. W. COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymonth—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Free Delivery — . , FEBRUARY 26, 1948 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTIL Monday of each menth in Scottish Rite Temple \ beginning at 7:30 p. m. G\X‘ "\(vf N K JAMES W. [ WILLIS R. BOOTH, Worshipful Master; LEIVERS. Secretary. €) B.P.0.ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers wes- come. VICTOR POWER, Ex- alted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Sec- retary T = CHARLES R, GRIFFIN Co 1005 SECOND AVE - SFATTE 4 + Elwot 5323 e = ; Serving Alasta 7 bxcl lusively< “SMILING SERVICE" Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 FREE DELIVERY Juneau "The Rexall Store"’ Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CoO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” Where Pharmacy Is » Profession ARCHIE B. BETTS Public Aceountant Auditor Tax Counseior Simpson Bldg Phone 757 FOR Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W Wenat Complete Automotive Service MT. JUNEAU SALES & SERVICE 909—12th St. PHONE 659 Specialists in Radiator Work The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates FHONE SINGLE © PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shaeif WARDWARF Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our 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 a daily hnblt—askclor I(IJ bRyEI:nAnL: Juneau Dairies, Inc, Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Bome Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Alaska Laundy DR. ROBERT SIMPSON OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted SIMPSON BUILDING Phone 266 for Appointments ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788 142 Willoughby Ave R R S Sene E DI SR T B SO RIS SR SRS ? a L

Other pages from this issue: