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e o s PAGE FOUR ; 2 Daily Alaska Empire Published every eveniny except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMCANY Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alasks @ELEN TROY MONSEN - . VYOROTRY TROY LINGO - - - Vice-President grains will bring cuts in certain market items before many monihs have passed. That will be healthy and good. But if all the crop is dumped haphazardly on the markets of the nation, a double disaster might follow. in times of poor crops. Second, a major depression First, we might sacrifice reserves, so necessary | R R DURE AR 8 TP T Ao THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1948 20 YEARS AGO i%'s empire AUGUST 26, 1928 e | {gns stations for sanitary puposes /and once-a-day washing up. But To NOWHERE 0“ | ken out last cent.” At nightfall they park on a quiet | eating at hamburger stands has ta- L ;resldemlal street and sleep until Hu"l FOR HOME daybreak. Then they move on, househunting. WILLIAM R. CARTER ~ + - =~ Bditor and Manager s Wk GAER A FRUEND - -~ - Menaxine Bditor might receive its initial impetus. We cannot afford ! The Elks and the Moose were scheduled to battle out the last game AFRED ZENGER - - - - usiness Manager 1 tak sk : > Elks se Were s . s ”lt‘":&t‘nt'zihrel“mkd A, “ltl.e ?auuon in tf:e selling of | » Sadn ®!of the 1928 season. “Stonewall” Jackson was to be on the mound for! CHICAGO, Aug. 26—(P— Seven| “We were afraid the police would Gutered In the Pn\lsslllrc 2 .;E:ewnd Class Matver | ETair his fall and winter will be a wise procedure.| e AUGUST 26 ® | ihe Moose with Bob Coughlin receiving. Pete Schmitz was to be hurler ' persons were driving to nowhere to-|pick us up and separate us,’ the ®elivered by carrier in Junea Ias for S1.50 per month g e I ® for the Moose with “Kelly” Blake behind the plate. day. father said. The five children ran ‘h:;".o:::.‘u"m_ It May Help ° MNFMB? .guPerkins . 5 TR They are the family of Norman |from 2 to 9. o > . p— 4 ° rankie ver . ’ | One year. In 15 months, in advance, 47.80; Wi A s E. E. Elva Kirkham of Douglas returned on the Aleutian from’Anchorage, | Strehle. They've been hunting a| They had a weekend respite in a e i B - fhicr t ey Wit peciptly botity (Cincinnati Enquirer) o Mzs. E. E. Stenger ® g ¢ davs before leaving for Rainier, Wash., wh house since June 20 when they were | southside hotel, arranged by friends, R tress Uittty W the aativers A week from now, perhaps two weeks, we shall | ® Catherine Hill §i{she wns to yisibSvrR oy days ketors joeme " » Where | oyicted. Their 1936 automobile is| Then they checked out, clutching o their pavers . 8 e o know more about the effectiveness of the proposed |® James J. Hill ® |she was to teach school. tHeir only home. | three “for rent” advertisements and Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office. meat buyers' strike than we do now. It is just pos-|® Gertrude Clancy . s Mrs. Strehle said, “we use friendly | disappeare Just pe Hite ppeared into the crowded city. MEMPRER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS sible that a ten-day boycott of meat will accomplish | ® Mamie Stillman . Mrs. Albert Parker and daughter Alberta of Strawberry Point ar- | — The Assoctated Fress Is exclusively entitled to the e for jis purpose of bringing down prices. . ® irived on the Virginia IV. spublication of all news dispatches credited to it or Dot thes- The signifiéant featitre ‘af the fesent boysdts 5 |® "8 070 '8 ‘v sue e ¢ AN Fise credited in tiis puser dud also the local news pubiished verein. NATiUNAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alasks Kewspapers 111 sourth Avenue Beaitle, TVASI\ "REPANCY? WHY THE D that it appears to be organized on an extensive scale across the country, having originated in Texas, of all places, which is a cattle country. The weakness of boycotts, of course, is that they produce only temporary results. Mrs. Dennis E. Jack- son, President of the Greater Cincinnati Consumers’ Conference, points with a certain amount of pride to the seven-day buyers’ strike comducted here last sum- mer. Prices went down, she contends, as proof of the influence of the housewife on the market. This may | be true enough, but they also went up again and have continued to rise ever since. To be successful a boycott requires almost 100 per cent cooperation on the part of the consumer— something, incidentally, which is rarely achieved. As we pointed out many months ago on the subject of | meat prices, they will remain as long as enough people have money to pay them. The consumer’s purse still | is fat—but not as fat as it was a year or six months | jago. When it becomes thin enough so that the consumer cannot really afford to buy, then. prices will | come down. R SperIing-EIy Vo—ws To Be Exchanged on Saturdav Evening Miss Mary Sperling and Mr, Er- nest Ely will be united in marriage Saturday evening at 8 o'clock in the Northern Light will read the marriage vows. Miss Sperling is the daughter of Mr. Harry Sperling of Juneau and Mr of Portland, Oregon. Miss Sperling’s attendants will be Miss Joyce Smith, maid-of-honor, Presbyterian: Church. The Rev. Willis R. Booth' — Ely is the son of Mrs. Beatrice Ely! On his way to attend college in Portland, Leslie White left on the Prince George. Bob Henning, who had been visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henning for the summer, left for Ketchikan aboard the Dorothy Alex- ander. He was to board the Norco at the First City and continue south. | Harry I Lucas, proprietor of the Juneau Motor Co, who had been ion a trip to Prince Rupert, Ketchikan, Hyder, Wrangell and Petersburg, returned gn the Admiral Rogers. Weather: High, 56; low, 53; cloudy. For parental energy in looking Saint Bernard dogs are named for after its young, the house WIeD |, mountain in Switzerland near has all other birds topped. ONG WIeN | 0 yne preed was developed and Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1948 The B. M. Behrends Bank Sufet;q Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS - !was recorded as having fed its young | + | where the dogs were used to help 11,217 times during the daylight of rescue travelers lost in the snow. one day jand Mrs. Robert Pasquan and Mrs. | {James Richardson, bridesmaids. Har- ry Sperling Jr., will be best man and lushers will be Bill Sperling, James | | Richardson and Robert Pasquan. There is an obvious discrepancy between the re- Meanwhile we shall view with interest the progress cent advice to grain growers issued by Secretary of of the consumers’ boyoctt. Any reduction in the cost Agriculture Brannon, and the oft-repeated declara- of living will be acceptable to most people. tions of President Truman on prices. The Secretary T S TR S R has asked farmers to store a “substantial part” of the forthceming bumper grain crop in order to maintain prices. The President has been asking Congress to (Retchikan News) take action to bring prices down. A little study, how- 1 ever, may show that the discrepancy isn't as great as the first glance would lead us to believe for political ad- Escapement and Enforcement { escapement and enforcement of regulations are neces- sary to insure future salmon runs. But there is a wide divergence of opinions as to the proper methods to be employed for conservation. These, too often are dictated or influence by self- interests, prejudice, fight over gears and too loose enfocement of regulations by bureau agencies. Proper escapment and enforcement, of course, would be a policy which would result in a minimum Joss to all interested parties. The best way to ac- complish this would be through a cooperative agree- ment between the majority of interests, and then a strict enforcement against violators, no matter whom or where it hits. Aside from a natural leeway vantage, we presume that both the Secretary and the President are interested primarily in programs which will react to the public good. Lowering prices, at the moment, certainly would be beneficial to most of us. But too great and too swift a decline in farm products prices might be the forerunner to depression ~as it was in the years which preceded 1929, '30 and '31. We have a modicum of sympathy, then, for the Secretary’s warning. No one can deny that the large current crops of One of the guests was Eduard:U S. occupation authorities report Daladier, Premier of France at the | that former Deputy Feuhrer Ru- outbreak of the war. He made it|dolf Hess is the laziest of the im- (he Washingtori A reception will be held following the wedding ceremony at the home jof Mr. and Mrs. Zalmain Gross on Gold Belt Avenue. i All are agreed upon one basic fact—a balanced | Miss Sperling, who was born and | raised in Juneau, graduated from Juneau High School in 1945. She at- tended the University of Minne- sota, the University of Alaska and the University of Oregon. She has been honored at many bridal showers this summer. Mr. Ely received a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Oregon this year and will begin work on his Master’s degree in Sep- | tember. Mrs. Beatrice Ely, mother of Mr. Ely, arrived on the George Washington on Monday to be pres-. lent at her son’s wedding. ¥ The young couple will to the States on the George Wash-' ington on September 3. They will return | ; : PHONES ~=FEATURES-—-for Friday and Saturday-- MQTW'GO'RN"M a special point to talk to the tall|prisoned Nazi war criminals. He reside in Eugene, Oregon, during — Montanan s at doing any kind of work. the coming school year and bo_th : o™ he Germans threw me | There fsnt the. remotest chance of them will attend te Universiv & QUR PLEDGE — To give you the finest foods at the lowest price consistent.with good By DREW PEARSON tary output | Pay is published. The commission will recommend Germany dur-|8rades. In fact, they may actual-|jaj for the murder of the Rev. Leo- were for the 1y may face a pay cut in the ngrq Kentish, Australian missionary, out bali-bear- | recommended elimination of taX on Arce Island Feb. 5, 1943. i deductions and certain allowances. | Air Force raids into ing the recent war purpose of kuocking ing plants. Further, ball be s are a K | essential in the making of war | increases for enlisted men and jun- mer japanese sub-Lt. Mangan Sage- to the States and Mrs. Bonnett’s goods. Two of the most costly ior Officers, but mome for the tob | jimg was hanged today at Stanley first air travel and first visit south package‘ ’c St. Ann's Hospital yesterday for HONG KONG, Aug. 26.—\#—For-' ! pesition with the CAA. This will be both boys first trip in a dozen years. They will visit Betty Bonnett, a daughter, in Oak- |land, Calif. 5 | | ' HOME FROM KETCHIKAN | i mto prisc Daladier said, “they of Federal Judge J. W. Waring, of there. | = /Continued from Page One! would occasionally let me read eston, S. C., being impeached i = : RS service. WE NEVER SACRIFICE uUALITY TO MAKE A PRICE'" sy ————~ magazines, In one of them, zn upholding the right of Ne- i S e & i it A American publication, I read an s to vote. The impeachment i | | . potential to Communist-ruled coun- pet article by you that gave me the clamor of Rep. L. M. Rivers, 8. C., i | cense for the ,an’ of a large concerned T could remain in pris- getting purposes in his district. < o" sn ) R ' quantity of finnkh;,'.,m, ul‘:(l ny:l on the rest of my life. Never did - | ey w l E N E n s BAc uAnEs HUCK cn'cx“ LEG'“‘M B s the manufactute of bear.|1 dream that some day I would be | BONNETTS SOUTH TODAY SPICY and For SEASONIN LEGS FOR & BNl o ings) to Czechcslovakia. This li- breaking bread at the same t:\hlc—jj S' | Mr. and Mrs. Alired Bonnett and TASTY and FRYING DINNER cense was issued to the Overseas "t you apanese r“ng |two youngest sons, Gilbert and [ \ 3 Pl conbary, X I SURPRISE { ivia Pan American ‘Airways today.' L] 51 L] { O [ ae L Satellite Czechoslovakia is today I The family will vacation in sthe one of Russia’s major munitions' Hig nking officers are in for| 3 states, visiting Washington, Ne}‘-” LESE BT T i ey |, Kenlish v tkoi i) JELL-© | MARSHMALLOWS | BUTTE has been converted entirely to mili- | Advisory Commission on Sexvlce! L " Bonnett’'s month vacation from his - CAMPFIRE Gold Medal . . . High Score 3630z.pkg.43¢| Pound 85¢ BRING YOUR COLGATE COUPONS HERE Six Delicious Flavors A fficial the verseas - . e e o o s | pene. commision wes set up v HOSPITAL NOTES | sare veen . oran: recamse col ha all bearings R . . —_— ! e the Aleutian from a tri . golumn, that the ball bearings be-|make ' oomprehenie BAEY Of| . sop' gme vus stmitied to]lo. Kelchikun vhero sho natp 4 PALMOLIVESOAP . . . 2bars23c | VEL—ForFineClothes . . Pkg3dc. lof a Methodist Church Board confer- Pms_ur“.lued soap Pkg 53‘ could be used in wa: produc of Chirles R. Hook, former head The concern’s exporl license was cof the American ‘Rolling Mills signed by both Secretary of Com- Company, Rev. John J. Cavanaugh merce Charles Sawyer and Fran-|President of the University of cis Melntyre, acting OIT head. Notre Dame, Keith S. McHugh, Nefther, however, would admit (his Vice President, American Telephone when questioned about the matter. and Telegraph Company, and Law- Sawyer refused to talk at all. He rence E. Whiting, head of the medical attention and John Bor- bridge, Jr.,, was admitted as a sur- gical patient. Discharged from the hospital were Mrs. T. Cook and Eric Linde. Percy Hunter, Jr., was discharged ence. MARY JOHNSON VISITS | Mrs. Edwin C. Johnson of Peli- | can, and her son Carl, are Douglas visitors. They are staying at the from the Government Hospital. 'Krugness residence while in town.: |§Y SUPER-SUDS . Large 39¢ {§ CASHMERE BOUQUET SoAP . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 bars 25¢ { M-DTISSUE| MODESS |TunaFlakes Carie (an39c sent word back through a press! American Furniture Mart Building | rolls $1.79 19 export licenses is ‘“confidential”| A previous committee of generals Cros Ol'd Puzzle . 0! 5“ : . ! and admirals had recommended McIntyre gave the same answer, | plus the claim that he. “couldn’t pay beosts for all ranks, with the | ACROSS 32. Lap robe 2 H 35‘ remember” O;i!:ix, l;mx-m-um case. (top cchelons getting the biggest| é :rll\ln ;z Poetic HUCOA o E G B e el g lel. pkg.95c TUPPINGS, l"lvo rlavors . e Zhn’ n't it that you can't re-!increases. Forrestal didn't even . Nervous . Blunders . Hap like that?" | ! twitehl fufuiber,a thin Iike (hat?!hg wpe bother to .s(em; this repart to Con-| e R SYRUP, s“ny Jim . . §h. ifll‘ 18 POTATO CHIPS . . zmg‘ pk'"m i esked. Jgress. Instead, he appointed the 12 Scarcer river B i o o e s et w0t B ¢ G el AVOSET, TableGrade . . . 80z.29c | FROZENFRENCHFRIES . . . Phy.35c ailes and they are not available at!report. “ 'll;romnal bird 42, llohman house= T e e e O et this time,” MciIntyre replied. “It's| One of its recommendations will oo aneal N - 8 Those in sec- 43. Ethereal salt t 8 late in the day and most of our!be the elimination of the tempor- ond child- 4. Pant “BURN’S CANAD'AN CANNED MEATS,, people have gone home. Besides, a1y system of family allowances for' s, C]i'(l:\,n‘ilnz L Nv“i:};;u:"alx:,g;. ici Delici 3 as I said, those files are conti- enlisted men. This amounts to pepper Ouhappy re L ADBelelecmus IZ oz. fin reg Lo ficlon lz oz. fin dential” $175,000.000 & year. Another recom-; > Shiincs **° 8 Brovided 4 enk ; e mendation will be a drastic curtail- | Golor. Product 39¢ Riodugt 37e¢ MIFFED ment of allowances for flying and CULT o iogaee - Argentina’s thin-skinned dictator overseas duty | AR try 66. Pen 2. Morbid breath, Juan Peron,is in a huff at Bra- e : Borore ™™ 67 Units of ingsound . S COFFE i % i REE 7 R - I g R Borden's INSTANTCOFFEE . . . . . . 2oz jar55¢c oz. jar F ¢ prand-standing ex-Colonel| The executive board of Ameri-| 65 Adjust 1. Crustacean ety 1 i ‘l’ is so furious that Brazilian news- cans for Democratic Actien wiil 5. Longwinded FR E E ABLES papers should have dared to criti- | plum r Preside ruman ¢ 7 7] 6 Y e 3 2 3 e it mp for President Truman , at S Hoaumater cize him that he has angrily can-|its forthcoming meeting in Chi- / e Dif Janeiro, | The New Dealers are still only 0. L‘[:"fl!!en The Brazilian Government invit- lukewarm toward him. They are F:‘::f. ':}f"fiuf RIPE — RED JUST SPLIT and BAKE! RIPE — SWEET ed Peron and President Berres of ino more enthusiastic about the - oM ¥ Uruguay to be guests of honor at President than they were _before B e 0 a" ( un c its gay “Independence Week.” Both | the Philadelphia convention when ! » Pertainiug to Je i accepted. But, now, Peron has they clamored for either General Rugzed mout reneged. He is very wroth 1t Eisenhower or Supreme Court Jus- ! tain crest lne_ free Brazilian press has been | tice Douglas. But, now, they have £ ‘.I:(x;‘:vlz);nlufgfg FRESH LOCAL saying about him. no other place to go. They like | Hornier Slam, The dictatorial Argenunian isn't Dewey even less than Truman | . lpli\u 3 used to a free press. He has vir-! So al their meeting, the ADA | C RdaTasly s ‘ . s ( tually suppressed it in -his own|leaders will go through the mo-| . o the ehen® o * . . country. He is peeved, apparently, tions of endorsing Truman. But U\“ecf: trial because President Dutra hasu't the campaign, they will con- Trapped o done the same in Brazil. i ce e their funds and efforts edame Berres will have the spotilght all | tests S O / to himself in glamorous Rio FLASHES b Pt 2 FTERNOO! 5.4 ."’ P.M Tex McCrary and Jinx Faulken- | P e | MOBNING 10315 A. M‘ A Y 23]’ s e » B e TR [ rary ax Faulken- | oSaling DELIVERY e AL i DELIVERY | burg, popular radio stars, have been | e ELIVERY i RS \' YTIME Former Sen. Burt Wheeler had|selected by the Army and Air| G iy ford 4 DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. BOAT ORDE DELIVERED AN an unusual experience at a re-|Force Recruiting Service to head a el »: cent dinner in Paris. new network recruiting progmm.( i . Steep . Pencil of light