The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1948, Page 4

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¥ " SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1948 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, M7 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR JUNEAU, ALASKA 20 YEARS AGO 7i'e EmpIRrE PAGEFOR Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY After being given a shot of the new truth serum, a fisherman said, “The fish that got away wash't more | than six inches long at the outside.” | i VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS Tak# Post Ne. 5350 Meets first and third ‘Thursdays. Post Hall, Beward Street. Visiting S AR R T A 4| “If the earth were flat, the Palomar telescope | CoNERN, METCALIE, WILLIS R. BOOTH, TROY LINGO = = = Vice-President | would bring Moscow within 7 miles.” The radio is | SEPTEMBER 11, 1928 ! gty g o Worshipful Master; JAMES W Bditor and Manager LEIVERS, ooy WILLIA CARTER =~ = = =3 Managing Baitor bringing it much nearer than that—it's dumping it The Rev. E. Gallant, Catholic priest at Skagway, was an arrival aboard | o, BEMRRA PRIMND. .. =, 5. - < Massen e ALFRED ZENGER - Tk o = - into our living room every day. od SEptESBERTIL ® |the steamer Northwestern. FEAMAR, Sutered 1n the Post Office in Juneau s Second Class Matter ARG : 7 : y s ahaste e ahah i B P 0 ELKS SUBSCRIPTION BATES: . .\ per meath| “An Indiana woman charges a dentist with pulling | o oes. Gkrio B | Melvin Eid, who had been with Britts it GEORGE BROS. E. U ., $8.00; eme year, $15.00 "] i 's i Princess Rouise, and expécted to make his future home in the south. 3 g % e e Daid, at the followins rates: 12 of her teeth against her will.”—News item. It's ¢ K. H. Jensen . Widest of Meeting every “Wedresday at ome 1 e Pib.00; six moaths, i sdvamce $1.80; | highly unnatural for a woman to have a will so weak | o Winona Monrce . ; S 3 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel. e month, 1o advance. 91.80. s B hi Wellman Holbrook, Land Classification Agent for the U. S. Forest : s S oaeTibers will ccnter o favor if they wili prompély motify as that. . Eva Wright . trofl Pefdramirg, He had come. JOSEPH H. SADLIER, Business Office of any fatlure or irregularity in tbe delivery Bt . Alyce Burton o | Service, was a passenger on the steamer Yukon from Petersburg. He ha Exalted Riler. W. 1. Bracy. o ‘.'r'ltp-h‘a:l.; News Office, 602: Business Office, 374 i o o |been there selecting homesites on the Petersburg highway. PHONE 33’ Secretary. 3 — e ——— s Bathing Beauty . SEPTEMBER 12 . e N B O, enclusively ontitied to the ure for R A . g Thomas Cashen Jr., eldest son of Mr. and Mrs, Tom Cashen, left Witk i bat woubllcation of all news dispaiches credied to it or not (e (Washington Post) . Mrs. E. S. Ellett ® on the Aleutian for Seattle enroute to Santa Clara, Calif, where he was -“Say ith ¥ H s r s0 the publi ¥ ., : xl:eaneu n this pave: Photographs of shapely young women wearing : Ididuw:‘aeb?v:zl:en :‘tn attend Santa Clara University. “SAY IT WITH OURS!” . S- GRAVES SEPRESENTATIVED — Alsiks Wewsswpers, M1l | ONe-piece bathing suits and déhtal ad smiles are now | & : o ) ‘The Clothing Man e Bids - Beattle, Vas. competing in the public prints with the grim faces ® e MErShee R Enrollment in the Juneau Public Schools totaled 490. The new high eau . g l Julia Colb . i L —_— of accused spies and traitors and of worried diplomats. | ® L it school bullding was still under construction. ; EVPS OVERALLS Every hamlet and city is choosing its candidate for ® Céc’“” l;l:r‘%h:;d : 7 FRONR 31 / for Boys the Miss America title; every community fair, picnic, ¢ THGE. LIPARRY. or other celebration now rolloyws the estabished c’:mom j. R. M. Burke M i v’l.mialms. -Fortehst :xami:mx\;l ffo:r ;:;":)C:; Eyekaien n. nr'h r .‘c.. | of choosing a beauty queen. These photographs—“art” | o . 1Fm‘est Service, left on the Range! 3 . BTy ) J s e 000000000 * Office In Case Lot Groocery | as their makers call them—are annual reminders of | | the change that came to the American social scene after W g Deputy U. S. Marshal W. E. Feero, who had been on an official visit PHONE 704 . |the Pirst World War. This year the news attention |long Democrat, she turned it down, |south, returned to Douglas on the Yukon. HAY, GRAIN, COAL Grocery Phones 104—105 !‘uiven to a clerical protest over a young woman's par- | jater went round to offer her ser- —_— and STORAGE Dal!“ MIO'M 1”—8’ * [ ticipation in a Miss America run-off recalls the social |yices to the Democratic National| — Miss Virginia Metzgar, Miss Irene Burke and Johr McLaughlin left '"""Mi - »“l;. i J;‘;"fz‘;‘r:'i ‘;fl“"g‘ut"ffi”{‘;a’t"::e‘;fit":":felg;::‘yth?'x:‘ Committee. The grateful Demo- |,y the Aleutian on their way south to attend school. Miss Metzgar ; ¥ 00 P. M. years ago. Call EXPERIENCED MEN piece bathing suit, which was to become an American an anteroom all morning, never let : |institution, as well as a subject of moral debate. Con- ¥ McLaughlin the Oregon State College at Corvallis. Alaska JANTTORIAL Service her deén anyone . . . It was the| crats kept Mus. Palmer waiting in|y.. t, attend the University of Washington and Miss Burke and Mr.i { testants in the first preliminary bathing beauty!ycs Angeles Daily News which : 3 CONKLE and FOLLETTE pageant held in Washington, in August, 1921, had|goaded U. S. District Attorney Weather: High, 45; low, 44: rain. * Phone 559 worn tunic bathing suits and long stockings. But at| yames Carter into prosecuting the ' see—eeeesssscssasmmnssmesesoss Red Your Relisble Pharmacists “DOC” WALKER READS THE RULES |atiantic City the following month the one-plece bath- | nousing frauds against veterans: It P i 5 b e ing suit made its debut*and rocked conservative society | took some hot edWorials to do it. Dall lessons in Enghsh Vg \ - BUTLER-MAURQ When politics entered discussion at the American ]in the early years of the jazz decade. Ham Moses, Arkansas utility ty- y ' L GORDON STEVE s DfiUG 0. Legion Convention in Sitka, it was N. R. (Doc) In time, however, the Miss America contest be- |coon and the man who gave away - Bt E ¢ Territorial Senator from this [came SO generally accepted that college girls entered | nylon stockings to influence util- LADIES’—MISSES’ Walker, a candidate for it ; ' i it. Last year a Sunday school teacher walked off with |jty voting ‘in Congress, is out to| WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “You will find them even-: READY-TO-WEAR Division, who called attention to Article IIT, Section 2, of the Constitution and By-Laws of the American Legion, Depsrtment of Alaska: “The American Legion shall be absolutely non- defeat forthright young Congress- | wheres.” Say, “EVERYWHERE,” there being no such word as EVER.Y-I man Jim Trimble of Berryvillle, WHERES. Ark. Moses, a Democrat, is mask- ~ OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Surprise. ing part of his operations behind 'gyp.prise, Arkansas' GOP leader, Wallace, opTEN MISSPELLED: Committee; two Ms, two T's, and two E's. Townsend, whom Moses put on the g H § h v INYMS: ipation, tation, expectancy, apprehension, ! Arkansas Power and Light Com- ‘rmsslz;:o B icipation o aebRcti ol Y, app! i pany payroll. Besetting sin of Con- |the title. Hence the recent threat of a bishop to | excommupicate a young member of his flock if she 'entered a Miss America preliminary made many front 1 pages. While this was not enough to deter the young political and shall not be used for the dissemination (woman, it brought into the open & rash<of criticism of partisan principles nor for the promotion of the |of bathing beauty pageants as “pagan.” This might candidacy of any person seeking public office or pre- rindicale that the postwar right wing trend in Am- erican life is bringing in a more conservative—ard less Seward Street Near Third Pronounce the first R, nnt: - . | Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Msnager Plance—Muxical Instruments ferment . 4 » § I i n WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us and Supplies i thos the ‘convention said that Doc, | revealing—concept of feminine beauty. However, gressman Trimble is that he work- X .Am. “;O.ww ,a:] a :pe:h and l; politician of no‘;potenual Venuses need not worry greatly. The bath=|eq for rural electrification, flood increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Phone 206 Second and Seward always ready with a speech 0 b D egion. His {InE besuty cult is too deeply intrenched in American | control and, public power- projects. | LAMENTABLE; fitted to awaken softow; pitiable; deplorable (accent s || o ——— mean ability, observed the rules Fiis subject wak|Hecial life; in retall merchandising, the rescry busi- < U I 'on first syllable). “It was a lamentable error.” ! HEINKE GENERAL speech was devoid of political slant. His subjec | ness, photography, movies—and now television—to be o o o 4 o o 6 o ¢ o ® o REPAIR SHOP “Americanism.” | easily routed. o . b Welding, Plumbing, Ofl Burner LR R e V- ERIE 100 i 3 3 3 BERLIN DISTURBANCES . TIDE TABLE -t MODERN ETIQUETTE ROBERTA LEE Blacksmith Work Stmpson Bldg. | ;. Phone 7 G Smidiins S | It Must Produce i bl GENERAL REPAIR WORE e 5 el . SEPTEMBER 12 *§ ISR SRS S LSRR G R, 1 06 929 W. FOR The London Daily Mail of September §, according b e . taw e Sy e ] ; Fhene . 13th 8¢ to a broadcast received by The Empire, says: chorage ) e High tide, 10:27 am, 116 ft, ! @ If one is at a luncheon, would it be all right to ask for a second || ew Wm Paper “While Four Power technical discussions are sup- A new steamship line has begun service to thej , [ o' iqe’ 16702 pm. 72 fr. e helping of some favorite dish? l o 5 s o e i s the\Geman capital, Bertin |Alaska Rail belt and the people of }!l?e a;en. esp;sc;a‘lly le High tide, 21:55 pm., 13.0 ft. - ® A. No; perhaps the hostess has planned for only one helping and '.rn.l‘ 'nm s‘.‘ et owania o noolram. i tne Easarn | AT,y mt e netiog Bt bre o " i ot e embarrnment (o con 1. oo || | Ideal Paint Shop sector have effectively prevented the City Council :h: i::\:?é:“a ieaflfy" seai b . S . Q. If one has to pass people who are seated in a theatre in order AL from meeting .Al % i ent'.el dboindsht Yo trapspartabion | i SEPTEMBER 13 ® to reach cne’s seat, is an apology in order? | HORLUL‘?’S ‘D-.-m Phone 549 Pred W. Wendt . s . i aska is entirely P M| e Low tide, 4:57 am., 24 ft. 5 i i S {1 2 ] i strat represents # " | 3 ' A. Most certainly; apologize quietly and then pass on as quickly ] e B B visorions | 2. "hes hat ool iEs K Nl S ANSS BEENC 1+ /g i 118 OB 18 M1 acmommii : ICE CREAM R ¢ ot Ut e Low tide, 17:15 pm, 63 ft. ® A allies to restore democracy in Germany. It was freely | It is with thanks therefore that we look upon the e High tide, 23:05 pm,, 137 ft.. » Q: Isn't it bad taste for a woman to reprove a maid in the presence o v Juneau’s Finest elected but, for the Russians, that is not enough. FOT ' jnauouraion of the San Francisco-Portland-Whittier e o ® o o o o o o o o @ Of Buests or other servants? : nllchmgs Ecnomy Liquor Store them to accept it as democratic, it must have a jine | AR, G H A." Yes; this sh‘ould be done privately and considerately. 2 majority entirely subservient to them ” However, Alaskans. are going to be dis‘PW‘"‘edlpRM(HOfl.HAu |S ON ! D “arke' BA v A n n s The paper declares that if while negotiations are jf sometime soon after the maritime strike is settled | MEATS—GROCERIES Phone 689 FREE DELIVERY PHONES 553—92—95 I| The Charles W. Carter in progress the very basis of Four Power government 'and regular sailings are squared away, a downward | t LOOK and LEARN % in Berlin is destroyed, they must become meaningless. | reflection In frelght rates is not felt. This should be! SPECIAL Imp; HAS NEW an A. C. GORDON O the ultimate goal of all water services for Alaska. ; ME(HA"'(A[ OPERA"ORl If the new line is just to hop In and grab off some | 1, traffic for the sake of adding to its| “Prices aren’t high—they merely appear so0,” as- ' The Alaskan Hetel What American became famous through the invention of an Adm. William D. Leahy, Presi-| dent Truman's own Chief of Staff, interrupted at this point with a! skeptical question, which illustrates how U. S. military chiefs follow the democratic prineiples of rough- and-tumble debate. | “How long did you say we could hold the Rhine, Omar??” he ask-' ed. General Bradley said he didn't want to make any promises, but he believed we could hold the Rhine for some time—long enough to bring up reinforcements. FRENCH WOULD RETREAT Admiral Leahy continued skepti- cal. The Russians, he pointed out, had 40 divisions in Germany, or about 600,000 men. He doubted that we could hold the Rhine for more than ten days. “The French will home,” added Leahy, served as Ambassador “apd they won't stop until they get to the Pyrenees, where they will start an anti-Franco revolu- tion. “You've got three or four good bridges across the Rhine,” Admiral Leahy continued, “and the French will keep them open to get their mistresses across.” Leahy did not exactly say but the insinuation was that would give the Russians time take the bridges. The Admiral concluded by warn- ing that the United States couldn’t hold the Rhine; in fact, couldn't hold more than Spain and perhaps Turkey. One of his Army colleagues sug- gested that Leahy was echoing the Navy's point of view. “And it’s not such a bad point of view,” countered the venerable sea dog, who once served as Com- start for who once to Vichy s0, this to U.S. SHOULD wLEAVE BERLIN ! “If war breaks now,” he main- tained, “we’ll be sending raw, un- trained National Guardsmen just; as we did to the Pacific in the early days after Pearl Harbor. The only thing is to get out of Berlin and out of Germany. If we did that, I think, from the many talks I've had with Stalin, we'd have no more trouble. “They call me a reactionary and an isolationist,” Leahy concluded, “but I believe in being realistic.” General Bradley asked how dem- ocratic forces could have won the Italian elections if U. S. Army had been withdrawn from Europe Others pointed out that the exit} of U. S. troops from either Ber- lin or Germany would be just tlw\ victory the Kremlin was pushing for, that it would have a disastrous | psychological effect on the Europ-! ean democracies, would be compar- | able to the appeasement Chamber- lain gave Hitler at Munich. | After this free and open Amer-| ican type of debate, it was the| unanimous opinion of everyone else ' at the joint Chiefs of Staffs con- ference that there would be no withdrawal from Germany. “DEMOCRATS,#OR-DEWEY” Barren-beaned Bill Bullitt, once an avid Roosevelt fan, is now busy organizing “Democrats-for- Dewey s, Bullitt is the man who persuaded FDR to appoint him special assistant to Secretary of State Hull—withdut Hull's know- ledge, and who also persuaded Roosevelt to recognize Russia. Later, Bullitt became Ambassa- dor to Russia, then to Prance. Today, the millionaire Philadel- phian is just as hot for Dewey as he once was for FDR. “I suppose,” remarked a friend, | [lican National Committee. ACROSS . Fizzle: slung 1. Mineral spring 27. Burface 4. Merchandise measure 8. City of the 33, Artis Ta) Mahar g2 Tuvern . 3. Aualyze gram- 2. Fall behind mitieally 13. Moham.nedun priest Scoten welgh- ing machine: . Contend . Cut expenses . Narrow fabrie Curved variant molding 15. Manner - Capital ot 16, Younk sheep regon 17, Tight 40. Help 18, iExtended 43. Member of the written principal expoxition Moro _tribe 20. Princely 44. Sediment italian 45, Beseeches house 49. Color 21 Biblical 60. ltalian region 61 Make 22. Walked 2 lamely . Citrus fruft Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie . Perlod DOWN . Back 1. Long narrow 6. Ancient Irish board c Couple . Pact . Kind of carpat rug o . With full force . Strikes violently Adorn . Trial . Seize clan . Period of time . Way . Paid one’ part . Small wild o3 of Celebes . Character in pear 5 Wikaen oins . Swagger . Story . Most certain ange peratic heroine ' Mhong Egyptian . river . Anclent Irish capital Remain serts an economist. All we know is that these false jof the “gravy” a A " improved reaping machine in 1831? rofi i il] The Mission boat = Princeton 4 appearances are keeping us broke. ;::‘mfi"m‘“‘ then the new line will have served noh.m] is on a special trip to Haines, 2. How many parables of Christ are recorded? Newly Renovated Reemm & ] II’ Dowsber. through the age-old laws of competi- | Where pupils of the Haines Mis- | 3. Where is the tibia bone located? 2 Mmuary st Reascnable Rates 4 1“*-3:“ p°°",d’s"; lbad ""l‘c" v:{";’l “':‘n v‘:jdm;: ::"" | tion and business acumen it can produce lower rates |510% XH‘:“‘S" W:il‘ bi ":‘:: to Skag<| 4. What is a plagiarism? Pourth and Pranxlin Sts. PHONE SINGLE O $ leclared a pseudo philosopher. Well, may . |and consequently better living for Alaskans, the new ;Way lor a medical checkup. | 5. What Italian composed twenty-seven operas? PHONE 136 who could live that long, or would want to under thc““ne will indeed have fulfilled a purpose and a long | th this miss{on over, the; ANSWERS: = B circumstances? | felt want. P{msc:ton Hm;-ll ‘wlll Jmnke call: 1. Cyrus McCormick (1809-84). c. . PHONE 685 £ S A LT AR R LR AR af agway, Haines, Juneau an 2. Porty-three. e 24 Ih walhill 'on mander of the U. S. Fleet and as|“that you won't be averse tol‘:;he:“::;“::: 'grhézz? vflzk:::‘ 3. In the lower leg. Whol IB"““ 10th 88, “IOM "‘rd'" (“- e 0 Chief of Naval Operauor}\]s.t Ll:e servm%i your counmf under tk;g Schaol at - Sitkh: : 4. A stealing or purloining and passing off as one’s own, the ideas, _ PAINTS — OILS " Merry-Go-Round ok m, o Do o et on Pelinn g Drrer e GE | i e e oo M K, e s rmove ne—vax o omr || | peldey ed bkt s S | | . Gi > HARDWARE — line of communications open|serve his country,” replied Bullitt. :::’g: ziwlh:nez:s:;carhlcpzr;gr1 2 R 5 for MEXERD o miS By DREW PEARSON through the Mediterranean. “You|“If I am called, I shall make thg’Ge Preacoft R o — - —_— are the ones who are always talk- | sacrifice.” orge Prescott, recent arrival A Window—Auto—Plate—GLASS Remington Typewriters (Contirued from Page Gne’ ing about that,” he reminded the| “I suggest,” advised the cynicahfwrfi;nn?:lz h:::fohom?fnpjfis:::uw The sweewst smt i” Tow“ G cn SOLD and SERVICED by Army. |iriend, “that you also contribute oy . II'EAI l.ass .r‘"d c. ¥ : »ilocating in the Presbyterian Mis- II A \ N E l . what the Russians already know—| One of the air generals present, $50.000 to the Dewey campaign| . “pouce on Gold Belt Avenue. C EMPORIUM fi.n!rmhw& "' 4 ' that we have about 300,000 troops then suggested that, given sixty! e ; Candies — Ice Cream — Soft Drinks — Tobaccos 538 Willoughby Avenue s A - in Europe, though only 30,000 com- |days and the atomic bomb, the| MERRY-GO-ROUND ATTENTION MASONS ! 330 South Franklin St. J. A. SOFOULIS, Proprietor Opp. Standard Oil Co. e bat troops. And, counting heav- | Air Force could stop the Red Army| Lovely Peggy Palmer, widow of| Stated Communication Monday DON ABEL PHONE 633 = -y on French and British support, dead in its tracks. Leahy disagreed.| Woodrow Wilson's Attorney-Gen-|evening at 7:30 with Labor in the FORD AGE NCY General Bradley figures that the | He argued that the United States|eral A. Mitchell Palmer, got a|3rd Degree. ‘ (Authorized Dealers)- Allies could 1all back on the Rhine, should have left Berlin long ago.|generous job offer from the Repub- J. W. Leivers, GREASES — GAS — OIL A0 oo W Secretary. Oldest Bank in Alaska : 1891—0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1948 % The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Depesit ' Boxes for Rent | COMMERCIAL Juneau Molor Ce. Foot of Main Strees JUNEAU DAIRIES | DELICIOUS ICE CREAM » daily habit—ask for It by nasme Juneau:Dairies, Inc. SAVINGS HOME GROCERY —_————— NILA HALL a8 a palt-ap sauscrier w THE DAILY ALASEA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE Phone 146 Heme Liquer Btere—Tel. 080 Quality Work Clothing American Meat — Fhene 3 .,.......l D mm“.'.n-..“ ZORIC and receive TWO TICKETS to see: > ; “MAGIC TOWN" - Alaska Laundy Feaersl 1. —12¢ per Person DR. ROBERT SIMPSON PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Mfl.fum -ASHENBRENNER'S FURNITURE

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