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PAGE FOUR Jaily Alaska Empi Daily Alaska Empire ®yblished every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRIN FING COMCANY Becond and Man Streets, Juneau, Alasks President - Vice-President Rditor and Manager Maneging Bditor Business Manaser DPOROTHY TROY LINGO WILLIAM R_CARTER SLMER A. FRIEND LLFRED ZENOER Sacered In the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. | SUBSRCRIPTION EATES: Selivered by earrier In Juneau aid Douslas for $1. six months, $8.00: onc year, $15.80 By mall, postage paid, at tue followine rates: One sear, in advence, $15. x months, in advance, §7.00; s monih, in advance, 81.50. Subscribers wil) confer & feyor if they wili promptly notify ibe Business Office of any fatiure or irregularity tn the delivery «f thef* papers. Telephones: News Otfice, 602; Business Office, 374. 50 per wonth; MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Asscciated Press is exclusively entitled to the une for edublication of ali news dispatches credited to 1t or not cthes- wvise rredited in this paver gud wlso the local news pubiiaded erein. NATionAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alasks Newspapers, 1431 murtt Avenue Bidz, Besttle, Vas.\ —— more than 300 students swarm ‘mmt needs. Today, | over College Hill. | No college anywhere has produced a brpader impact within the area it serves than the school whose guidance and progress has been the job, the hobby and the dream of Dr. Bunnell. More than 5000 Alaskans have completed the! | university’s special short courses in mining taught by roving staff members to would-be prospectors. | More than 100 graduates of the School of Mines | are holding down important engincering posts, most }ur them . within the Territory. Sourdough farmers | have learned to look to the university’s agricultural | | experiment stations here and at Matanuska for ad- | vice. Fur breeders journey to the university's experi- | mental station at Petersburg to see what happens when foxes of diffeent hues are mated. In less prosaic realms, the influence of the uni- | | versity bursts the bounds of Alaska. The college jmuseum houses 75,000 specimens of Arctic artifacts, | most of them ancient implements dug up by University of Alaska scientists and students, and scores of ex- | hibits of prehistoric monsters. In cubicles crammed \with sensitive meters, recording devices and cameras, | skilled technicians have scanned the upper atmosphere |over a period of years with such success that the }F‘edeml government has agreed to erect a $975.000 | geophysical institute on the campus to probe further 1 mysteries of ionospheric and magnetic frontiers. Prob- Ilems of public and personal health will be put under (an Arctic micoscope shortly in a $4,000,000 laboratory | where musk oxen once grazed in an earlier Uniiversity | would shed JUNEAU IS MUSICAL Juneauites like good music. This was in evidence week at the concert at which appeared Carol Brice, Negro contralto, under the auspices of the Juneau Con ; Association. The attendance at the 20th Century Theatre is said to have been the largest at any similar event in Juneau. Now comes the Rosa Page Welch, Negro mezzo- sopranc, who will be heard in concert at the 20th Century Theatre on November 3. This concert is under the joint auspices of the Chapel-by-the-Lake, the Memorial Presbyterian Church and the Northern Light Presbyterian Church. She is acclaimed both as last an outstanding artist and an “embassador of good will” improving inter-racial relations. | Following this engagement, the Juneau City Band, sponsored by the Juneau Rotary Club, will give a public concert at the 20th Century Theatre on Novem- ber 16. Previous concerts of Juneauw's local band organization have been highly enjoyable and a musical treat. The coming program has been so arranged to please all patrons of music. Monument Necessary No (Fairbanks News-Miner) Two hundred sixty-eight days from now, from the birch-wooded knoll which has been his home and his devotion " for 27 years, Dr. Charles Ernest Bunnell will close his cereer as chief administrator ef Am- erica’s farthest north institution of higher learning. On that date—July 1, 1949—by appointment of the Board of Regents, he will become President Emeritus of the University of Alaska. His view toward the south will be the same spec- tacular panorama that greeted Charles E. Bunnell when he stood on that same Lilltop in December 1921, wondering how he was going to turn $60,000— appropriated by the Alaska Lcuislature for the pur- pose—into a college. Behind him and a cornerstone planted as early as 1915 on that site will rise the cluster of frame and concrete structures whose halls and classrooms in the intervening years have drawn students and educators from every State of the Union and from many foreign nations. Nine months after he assumed the duties of Presi- dent on December 7, 1921, the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines opened its doors and the student hody—all six of them—trooped in. For four years running, on® diploma filled the commence- The Washington gutted Western {Jects at the las | they most certa 1of Alaska experiment. r. Bunnell has achieved a distinction equalled by few in the rarefield zones of pedagogy. He is known as a man who works in his shirtsleeves with dignity. He comes by the distinction legitimately. Charles E. Bunnell was born on a farm near | Dimrock, Pa., 70 years ago, and had a working ac- | quaintance with cow and plow before deciding to study Greek and Latin at Bucknell University. After he was graduated summa cum laude in 1890, he snatched at the chance to teach the thre Rs to Aleuts on Wood Island near Kodiak. He has lived in the Territory since. During nine years of teaching school, managing a hotel and running a bank, he read law books at night. He was admitted to the Alaska bar in 1914, was appointed U. S. District Judge for the Fourth Division—the post' he left to accept the Presi- | dency of the university. Upon his retirement next July, it will not be necessary for well-meaning Alaskans to congregate for discussion of a monument to Dr. Charles E. Bunnell. He has already built it himself. Armed Forces Not Yet Unified . (8t. Louis Star-Times) When the Armed Forces Unification Act was| passed, Congress expected that about two years would be required to put it fully into effect. One of those | two is gone. Our national life may depend on how | soon unification is completed. The danger is that it will take too long, not that it will be done too quickly. Various officers and officials have praised the suc- cesses of the first year. The citizen should stress what remains to be done. | 1. There is still no unified long-range strategic plan. The big argument is over the Navy's desire to take part in the bombardment of enemy centers with carrier-based bombers. The civilian wishes he were as confident of the Navy's ability to cope with the: new types of submarines as he is of the Air Force's ability to carry out strategic bombing. 2. The r.ew military establishment of the Depart- | ment of Defense and its sub-departments of the Army,! Navy and Air Force is awkward. The tendency toward empire-building has increased. The Department of Defense is not yet ready to present either a unified | budget or a unified legislative program. Integration is often evaded by having Congressmen introduce separate bills favoring this branch or that. 3. No money has been saved. The purpose of unification, of course, is to achieve economy of force, not dollar economy. But some economy and greater efficiency would result from eliminating unnecessary or overlapping installations. 4. The real unification of heart and spirit has = g, A OCTOBER 19 Gail Morrison J. C. Ryan Arthur McKinnon Albert Peterson Gustave Peterson David E. Simonson Helmi Jewell Gladys Newman Amy ' o 060 0 0 00 60 0 o0 neutrality, while secretly nngned, with the Scotch importers. Lone exception is Hiram Walker, which has been producing some domestic Scotch. The others—Schenleys, Seagram and National Distillers—all act ns! distributing agents of vm‘lnusl brands of Scotch imports. So they no tears if some of their American Scotch competi- tion were Kkilled off. To fight their case Distillers Cor- poration, Ltd., have hired the big- gest name-lawyer available—John! W. Davis, once Democratic nominee { for President. ' Not to be outdone, the U. S. Scotch distillers have hired Joseph Nunan, Jr., former Commissioner of Internal Revenue. It will be a merry fight. i MERRY-GO-ROUND _ The University ot Wisconsin seems to have fallen for some| neat propaganda by the Wisconsin Power and Light Company. The | University’s Extension Service circulating a so-called “education-! al” film prepared by Wisconsin, Power and Tight whicn inferen- | | tially compares public power with: Nazism . It is costing AFL leaders more than $20,000 to set up an independent labor commit- | tee to campaign for Truman and | Barkley—Ilargely because Teamsters | Union chief Dan Tobin blocked ' endorsement of the Democratic ticket inside the AFL - executive A. The silver should be placed on the plate, as at the end of a coundil . . . The CIO has decided 'course. not to pull out of the World Fed- Q. Is it necessary that a girl check her wrap when dinivg in = ration of Trade Unions, to which he Russians also belong. Phil Vurray feels that membership in the organization gives a loophole by which the CIO can get ideas be-; hind the Iron Curtain. ¢ .- { DATES FOR MAYOR'S! CONVENTION, SITKA, SET FOR NOV. 18-20 The Southeast Alaska Mayors" Convention, scheduled to meet in Sitka November 15, 16 and 17, has | been changed to Nov. 18, 19 and 20. The change was made at the re- quest of some of the Mayors plan-, hardly begun. Officers and men must receive a com- | ning to attend, in order to allow mon basic education and training. There must be widespréad interchange of personnel from branch to branch. Only then will the large loyalty to the nation override narrow loyalty to a particular service. reclamation pro-| means made in Scotland, and that t Congress—which | this word should be banried from inly did. But he|the labels of all American-made| {didn’t remind the people that he, Scotch. | rewarded the chief GOP enemy of | 1f g0, a small group of Ameri- | reclamation—Congressman Robert | can distillers, led by the Scottish Jones of Lima, Ohio—with a juicy| American Distilling Co.., of Peoria, ‘!:Appuimment to the Federal Com-iy)l claim they will be driven to | munications Commission . . . Har-|the wall. They are already suffer- Max Albrecht Blank— Indicted ©ld Stassen, always quick to chal-|ing unfair restriction in being re- espion- lenge others to debate until hejquired to label their product age in the Duguesne case. Pleaded crossed issues with Tom Dewey, is| “Scottish-type” whiskey, they ar- guilty to violat. the Foreign Now slower on the uptake. Thelgue This makes people thing it Agents Act and was sentenced to| Women's Press Club recently invit-|is an imitation of the real pro- |ed Stassen to settle his farm price Merry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON ‘Contirued frcm Page Gne | for conspiracy to commit eighteen months in jail. Also em- ” ployed in the German Library of |debate in Information, a famous Nazi propa- ganda outfit in New York. Brannan. Brar cepted, but Stassen held back. Andreas Henrich Jans ard wife, a public forum with | Secretary of Agriculture RED TAPE OVER AIR duct. | Big American distillers of bour- them to hunt to the end of the deer season. The Sitka City Fathers are busily planning a program for the en- tertainment and amusement of the visiting dignataries as well as a |full schedule of meetings. - e —— BURDICK TO SEATTLE Charles Burdick, Assistant Re- gional Forester, | yesterday by PAA, expecting to be about three weeks there and in Portland. His trip chiefly con- cerns litigation over a scow lost in 1044. R e ot RUMMAGE SALE Wed., Oct. 20, 10 a.m., Lutheran Church.. 19 2t 1 Charlie | B iy o kon are officially observing a pious nan WANT ADS BRING RESULTS! Crossword Puzzle Emma— Visited by one of the, cight Naz: boteurs in Chicago| Veterans going into the air-| when they arrived in this country|freight business are still snarled | ACROSS 33 Sanit Sainte by submarine. Jans and his wife in red tape, can't get Government| 3 That which is Marie: collog. " given 33,600 in cash by.Nazi certification from the Civil Aero- ‘woven 35. Leave py Neubauer for safekeeping. {nautics Board. In formal hearings,| & Prows = 35 Feonoun Paul Kanuer— The U. S, Su-lme Board has been lined up al- |'_£ fi:::lnz' I',,‘“Ill g ?!.o‘mlfeenen preme Court, ruling on his denat-|mest solidly behind the big air-| 13. Chronometer 40. At an Inner uralization, ‘said on June’10, 1946:|lines which are opposing the vet-| 17 Passed - L “There is solid, convincing evi-|erans s New: comb. oy’ Jialian city dence that Knauer beiore the date! One CAB member, Harold A.| 19. Otherwise 44. Consumed of his naturalization and subse-|Jones, was so eloquent in express-! 50 Insect's exe 43 Gard wosl guently was a thoroughgoing Nazi|ing the big airlines’ point of view Importune 45. Insect and - faithful follower of Adolf|that the grateful Américan Alflines! b Dot much . (45 Wiliiriace s Hre Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie Hitler.” counsel, Dan Grikbon, injudiciously hesitation o o, Yorship 4 Frits' Bohot Rachise Mentber | 1ot iy this sreroar B togntc-of |/ 2 Feseimine A Coke shiatn. L SR : 50{3:“.0"‘;:‘" of German Bund and employee everyone : i Amerioan vt B QUK datee . (Lola G an. ’ "5;::::‘;;‘:“”‘ of g German Consulate in Los Au-| “Mr. Jones, 1 don't think you|30. Rodent = == o Tael\e\';(l‘l_l‘:m 3 iak nap RS r hrl0Ee, geles. uring war he refused to'could have put your company's 32 Long narrow 59. Attach with 4. Pigpen 9. Joker work, saying he would not aid the policy into better words.” | inlet thread 6. Paim lily i P U. 8. war effort. Jones coughed nervously, colored 4. Timber tree of Hartwiz Reesc—When arrested, with cmbarrassment. o the Nazi flag, swastikas, photo-| Note—The Air Force has an- AT graphs of Hitler and Mussolini, nounced the urgent need for build- . Decree and Fascists anda ergling up an air-cargo fleet. Yet [T P found in his fon. He was usually astute Seth Richardson, ! . Stands for leader of the an Bund in ccunsel for Northwest Airlines, . Shaved ke an San Francisco testified: “This whole setup is in- :f"’whmd Kurt Ludecke—Author of the opportune. There may be need etric land beok, “I Knew Hitler” which was for an air-freight industry five e S tacter dedicated to Ernst Roehm, Gregor or ten years from now, but not Hone Strasser “and meny cther Nazis' now. 8 M«f;ll :Ensdtllvf who were betrayed, murdered, and — e traduced in their graves’ WHISKEY BATTLE | sound The list of Nazis Senator Rever- The whiskey industry, which has RN s comb wanted kept in the U. 8. A. witnessed many a David and Goli- ,Ta'k:flll.‘;yr-d i5 too long to be published here ath battle, is headed for another . Ihdian and will be continued in a future now that the Internal Revenue . Measurs of column Bureau has opened hearings on| length KEEPING THE RECORD STRAIGHT | The powerful President Truman spoke sorrow- | trust—Distillers the questicning Tully abgut how the Republicans claims that the word | Whiskey made in the U. S. A. of labeling Scotch | Scotch whiskey | Corporation, Ltd-— | “Scotch™ . Character in “Uncle Tom's Cabin” Alr: comb. form Donkey . Uncooked Symbol for radium DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA : TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1948, 20 YEARS AGO fromg EMPIRE H Two trucks collided on Front Street, one a GMC of the Morris fleet i ant. and a smaller truck driven by “Felix the Mexican.” Chairman Billy Biggs of the Purple Bubble Dance, annual Elks affair, announced that hundreds of purple bubble balloons would be “gassed” and decorations completed for the dance the following day. | ' o 1 n the Wagner A large crowd attended the Alaska Day dance given at the A. B. Hall by the Pioneers of Alaska the night before. S. O. Osland, Billings, Mont., oil man, took an option oi mining property at Salmon Creek. M. L. Merritt and B. F. Heintzleman left on the steamer Alaska for Petersburg to look over timber sale tracts and for a general inspection. Commanders. WELIAN WILLIS R. BoOTH, SHERLOCK, Adjut- Worshipful Master; JAMES W . Secretary. i e e MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. . VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS Taku Post No. 5359 Meets first and third ‘Thursdays. Post Hall, Seward Street. Visiting Comrades Welcome. GEORGE BROS. ‘B.P.0.ELKS Widest Selection of Meeting every Wednesday at LIQUORS || 2. Jitis brohers v - PHONE 399 Exalied Ry o SADLIER, . et il A‘er. W. H. BIGGS, “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists PHONE 311 H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man .LEVI'S OVERALLS The Elks bowling team swamped the Brunswick maple busters in the for Boys isi” first of a series of matches. Brunswick team men: Baroumes, Cunning- | fle BMI rec‘ c‘. Q: ham, Gavril, Midkiff, Stewart scored 2247 points. Elks team men:l Office in Case Lot Grocery B '] Barragar, Helgeson, Metcalf, Lavenik, Council, Radde scored 255¢ points. | . PBCNE 1704 . eri’s Food cenlc[ it HAY, GRAIN, COAL Grocery Phones 104105 Weather: High, 45; low, 39; cloudy. and STORAGE Meat Phones 39539 P ; Deuveflu—’m:lu A M Daily L in English % il can EXPERIENCED MEN Nkl ally Lessons in EngiisN w. 1. corRDON T d e e et ettt &8 -~ WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “The reason that they went was never divulged.” Say, “The reason WHY they went. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Pathos. Pronounce pa-thos, first syl- lable as PAY, O as in OF (not as in NO), and accent first syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Load (a burden). Lode (ore deposit). SYNONYMS: Explanation, explication, exposition, definition, de- scription. l 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: ! OMNIPOTENT; unlimited in power. (Accent follows the P). “God's will} and pleasure and his omnipotent power."—Sir T. More. i \ | ! ; | \ Q. Can you give me some suggestions as to what should be sa\d! when leaving someone to whom I have just been introduced? { A. “Goodbye, Mrs. Jones. I am very glad to have met you,” or, odbye, Mrs. Jones, I hope that I shall see you again soon.” Q. What should be done with the silver when passing one’s plate for a second helping? ) H ) 1 “Go hotel, and she wishes to dance? A. No; she may leave it on the pack of her chair. [ e e e e e ] 1. What metal is the best conductor of heat and electricity? 2. Which is the largest Canadian province? 3. Whose face appears on a five-dollar bill? 4. In a deck of playing cards, which King is in profile? 5. Who is known as the “Father of English poetry”? ANSWERS: 1. Silver. b 2. Quebec. 3. Abraham Lincoln. 4. Diamonds. 5. Goeffrey Chaucer (1340-1400). EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and kranklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS Alaska JANITORIAL Service FRED FOLETTE Phone Red 559 "“The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists . » BUTLER-MAURQ STEVENS Ui to. LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third Alaska Music Sopply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Muxical Instruments and Supplies 206 Second and Seward Pho ARCHIE B. BETTS Public Accountant Auditor Tax Counsetor Simpson Sldg Phone 76§ * HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP Welding, Plumbing, OfI Burner Blacksmith Work GENERAL REPAIR WORK Phone 204 929 W. 12th 8BS Wartield's Drug Siore (¥ormerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wenat Juneau’s Finest Hutchings Ecnomy Market Liquor Store FREE DELIVERY Phone 689 ; PHONES 553—92—85 The Charles W. Carter The Alaskan Retel Newly Renevated Reoms ¢ Reasenable Rates PHONE SINGLE 0 PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St PHONE 216—DAY er NIGHT - for MIXERS er BODA POP ..mm-'w Bhelf e o Vo e A2 S e NI e M Window—Aute—Flate—GLASS went to Seattle] Plumbing © Heafing Oil Burners . IDEAL GLASS CO. 538 Willoughby Avenue Opp. Standard Ol Co. DON ABEL PHONE 633 Telephone-319 Nights-Red 730 Harri Machine Shop, Inc. z . SoLD Sad SERvICES J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customery” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Centiry of Banking—1948 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS \ C. B. HOLLAND as a paid-up subscriber 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: "SLAVE GIRL" Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre PHONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB (0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Brownie's Liquor Store Phone 103 = 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 2508 Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Strees Casler’s Mea's Wear Formerly SABIN'S Stetsen and Mallery Hate Arrew Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmeonds Shees | c— TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Cemplete Outfitter for Men HOME GROCERY Phone 146 BHome Liquer Stere—Tel. 090 American Meat — Pheme 38 ™ ZORIC SYBTEM CLEANING Alaska Laundy B. W. COWLING COMPANY DR. ROBERT SIMPSON Dodgo—Pirmosth—Guryser OPTOMETRIST Dafieta—ioten Truichy Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted SIMPSON BUILDING Phone 266 for Appointments P —— ASHENBRENNER'S _NEW AND USED FURNITURE