The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 1, 1949, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR ; LASKA . - ° . rocks at a time far back in the mythological past. | ¢ ;s Dali )’ :ilaSka Elnp"‘e Like all myths, this one has appealed to many men | T== & y from e, 7 5 48" | SECOND and FOURTH o O T U {who have sought through the ages to substantiate = 20 \ EA RS A G 0 THE EMPIRE ¢ - Monday of each month A PRINTING COMPANY 'it, up to now without success. An American expedi- in Scottish Rite Tb‘mlfle/\/ N\ e s ks tion which was to have gone last summer to explore ENTREOIEL " i beginning at 7:30 p. m."@{ - - - President « T Vicebresident | Mt. Ararat could not get itself ready in time to be JANUARY 1, 1920 SERIICN WILLIS R. BOOTH, Editor and Manager ; . ¥4 g . B4 funacing Eaitor | there for the two months' thaw and was called off B. D. Stewart, Jr. left for the south to resume his studies at Reed | pewey W, Get the NEW Worshiptul Mister; JAMES W g R T T e _Business Manager | temporarily. The rumor which we mention may College in Portland after spending the Christmas holidays in Juneau.| Aetzdort WASHINGTON LEIVERS, Secretary. L Otffice In Juneau as Second Class Matter. | serve further to stir up the interest of this group of . S L) e Vice-Pres. B e I. Goldstein and Sam Feldon were passengers south on the Princess and Habit! % B P 0 ELKS JANUARY 1 William Alexander Louis C. Lemieux Lu Liston William B. Cline, Jr. Jack Pasquan Maxmillian Younger Katherine Stevens Marguerita Doucatte Delivered by r,,,".,:_‘.“u', :\?“:Tx:ifln::::zf}qr $1.50 per month; | searchers, and others, for the shards of Noah's elusive Mary. Goldstein was host to fishermen previous to his departure. Managing Director ~ six months. $8.00; oné vear, S15.00 vessel. By mail, po: oaid, at the following rates: $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; Undoubtedly the Kurdiah farmer who made the o favor if they will promptly notify | FEPOrt saw something through the melting snow. We faflure or irregularity in the delivery have an idea that it might be a kind of ship other 602; Business Office, 374. | than the Ark of Noah, and that there may be painted MEMBER CIATED PRESS jon its sides some nm‘nb(‘\s which will identify it as an ed P usively entitled to the use for air ft reported missing without trace during the \patches credited to it or not other- e o e tocel mews published War. Things like that have been known to happen. Hellan'’s Pharmacy was advertising poker chips, toilet sets, etc., re- ALASKANC FEEL AT LOM) y:‘é;’;‘.’ \cr‘i;gng“;i?;; -/ I:‘ ducing his Christmas stock on hand. 54 come. JOSEPH H. SAD?LIWE?R- Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Elks Hall was crowded with dancers the previous night at the Secretary, annual Hi Jinks. A touching moment was when Henry Messerschmidt alted Ruler, in accordance with the never broken custom of the Elks, halted the affair and spoke the 11 o'clock “To Our Absent Brothers’ Follow the Cabs to while the merrymakers stood with bowed heads. { e ‘ Hcose Lodge No. 700 ROSS’ OASIS | i JANUARY 2 Dorothy Manthey O. F. Benecke Arthur Burke Elma Olsen Hattie Stanton Helen Hansen W. E. Cahill R. E. Ellis Myna Lynn Butler G. R. Isaak William J. Keshak - Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Communism in Church (Washington Post) Under the title.“100 Things You Should Know About Communism and Religion” the House Commit- tee on Un-American Activities has just issued the 1second brochure in its series exposing “the Communist conspiracy and its influence in this country.” The pamphlet, in the form of 100 questions and answers, sets out to show “what will happen to you and your Schools were to reopen the next day and the concensus was there Regular Meetings Each Friday in Douglas would be 100 per cent attendance as the flu epidemic had subsided. Few Governor—ARNOLD HILDRE for a Good ’[:ime patients were in the hospital and none of the cases were serious. Secretary— b — WALTER R. HERMANSEN Wallace Beery and Raymond Hutton were rred in the film ———————————— ["Bchlw'd the Front aid to be the world’s best comedy. Vera Reynolds, i ’ B‘W ted by Zasu Pitts and Ethel Clayton, was at the Palace in “Risky Bert's Food'ficmer usiness. H.S. GRAVES GMmeryt Pll’lhnnn 104—105 } 5 Aty il Y [ea ones 39539 60 Qs and As cover this pretty thor- e ee——— Alaska Juneau mine’s yi - 1921 The Clothing Man . : ibing what has happened in Russia, i joti o B i v um the committee draws a quite terrifying picture of what =gV = ot eer s o i LEVI'S OVERALLS 2:15 — 4:00 P. M { would happen to all religions under communism here. F ¢ ‘1‘”; n D. Roosevelt became Governor of New York State for the for Boys “Th Rexall St y Isecond term. . e eXa nrp- # |Ti is probably an accurate picture . No one denies — - — e — {least of all the Marxists, to whom it is a basic dogma— Your Reliable Faarmacistc »OTT ' THR Y | that communism is antithetical to religion. And there ann X hi s for 1928 were value: cer $45 v YOU D THE YEAR AHEAD A% COmmIEIRO UA SR lPtcal 10 e 610N, _AnE: S . | canned salmon shipments for 1928 were valued at over $45,500,000. GEGRGE BB&S. fcan be no disputing the prediction that every church T BUTLER-MAURO e . : AR | ITLER-MAURO {and churchgoer would suffer suppre = o “ Widest Selectio { k | ! Finances of the Territory were in good shape a ding to Terri- Widest Selecticn o Tradition ordains this the season of resolve. cution if a Communist r.gime ever took over in this e cysnm i i i Lhn"m”r ol ,f'mn o AR TARED DRUG CO. Let’s keep our re s, simple but firm, Ideas | counry. | o AeRlngSE B, Uhe, ann DAhaDe or, apC.8 RIQUPES b | start of the New Year being $657,678.57, also with $81,000 in the Pioneers’ 14 St ty @ better place in which to live, it may | tlinz Communist ambitions, we would like to point d n R | out that the danger of their successful accomplishment Weather conditlons and temper- | | Weather: High, 26; low, 24; ar. 1T “8¢ w ¥ $ ! 3 our own bakyard, You figure out what | i § e 3 3 oy F WITH OURS!” o ik 5 | whic! rchmen are sgnizant > fact ves, SAY i UURS he Squibb St which churchmen are fully cognizant. The fact prove m. 120th Meridian Time, and| i =quinb Stors place we call our home. | not that religion is in imminent danger. Indeed, on t in our own backyard and for the next [the committee’s own evidence as displayed in this PHONE S mmunity betterment. and is being successfully handled already by the 4 "324;5‘;‘“‘;': WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “In what portion of Indiana | 5 make it, | churches without the committee’s maityr-making =°° % -43—FO08 1,5 «1 am hoping for your quick recove | T}!p Em 7 ?afi':‘} !_:c, | publicity. ' 39— Fo OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Delinguent. Pronounce de-ling-kwent, Four things, not 100, we think the brochure dem- o 8 } PRC o4 AY GRATN. COAT { Auditor Tax Counseror 0000000800000 060000600S0 e @ 600000 ccecccccoc0s00000s e il Juneau, follow: wnity is only as strong as we cares much what happens to our town. Let's prove that we care by making that 10t de-lin kwent. 1, on a local level, we resolve to make| And “if” is the biggest word here. Without belit- BRI 80 4 | Home Building Fund. PHONE 39 KABBY EQC' 5 . [ S0 1 making the world of nations a better is pretty remote. e presence of a sligh ount of bis pretty te. Th f a slight £ also cn the Pac Joast at 4:30 | il better the churches, schools and insti- g oo 1 only that Communists are hypocrites, 3 H s s b 1 B ems to only that Communists are hypocrites, 1o e 59 % Fog ot o TRl e | al y essons m ng IS \{7’ i GORDON | .!uneau FI(‘ ists Whese Phaymacs 16 s . Ao | > o program for support to any and all | pamphlet, the threat is of almost negligible proportions s (e dek Lo s g S i 3 Tt A 18— Snow Office in Case Lut Grocery | Public Accuuatant i 4 i : Edmonto ... 4—Cloudy onstrates beyond cavil: (1) that religion has suc- . 4 % resolt C to build a better community. cumbed to communism in Russia; (2) that Commun- Fairbanks -Ss_s‘moke : OFTEN MISSPELLED: Bouider (a large stone). Bolder (more dar- 1t 1t spirit that those who publish The {g¢ yearn to see it hapoen here; (3) that they are .. —Missing ' ing). Empire i for you a Happy New Year 1949. I not getting very far at it; and (4) that the committee =" 19--Clcar; SYNONYMS: Change, alter, convert, modify, transform, transmute. e M it would nevertheless like to blow up a big scare about it. JuI¢ L\| Airport, ~Partly Cloudy WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us TWO AND TWO The committee’s habit of springing a sensation every :\cxix‘\: t,:‘ 3 fgfg}m | increase our vocabulary by mastering cne word each day. Today’s word: 1l EXPERIENCED MEN i A2 time it is about to come up for a new appropriation <odiak —C €4l | INCOMMODE; to give inconvenience or trouble to. “We are incommoded s “7&75‘ Pa per and an extension of life suggests the real purpose He!z=bue -32—Clear |, & wont of room,” a JANTTORIAL Service , An object which may be the remains of Noah's | ¢ this brochure—and the value to be given it. McGrath s | iR LR " FRED FOLETTE Yhone D47 s Chnr Phone 247 Idea) Paiat ;.}i.afj and STORAGE || stmpson 3iag been seen on Mt. Ararat, in Eastern Turkey. (AN TG A Nome -33 Clear | ry comes by way of the Associated Press in| “An explorer has captured in the jungles of the NCIthw "M‘gfiiing‘ MODERN ETIOUETTE by i 3 from a man \\'?m talked to the man who insists | Amazon a wild woman w.l‘m can t talk."—Press report. B 341-50111551“: ROBERTA LEE Phoks 549 he saw a petrified ruins of a ship. It may be just |No doubt that’s why she’s wild. g ’i STEETY H;wgg another story, too, like the one about the Loch Ness _— : T Ik EANR T G SR e O RSNV RND nster, which breaks into print during the dog days “The law of supply and demand is responsible for Sitka 27 Clmvd’*]w Q. When one is calling upon a person who is ill and cannot see Juneau’ ~ every year. Itoday’s high prices” says an economist. Obviously, (o, . ¥l this person, what should one do? g uneaw’s Finest Whitehorse -4—Snow | to repeal this law. Yakutat 14 Partiy Cloudy| A ©One may leave flowers, or a card bearing some expression such Aquor Store Noah's Ark is supposed to have gone on theill\m- the thing to do is - —- —_——— e > - DU “I hoping for vour quick recovery.” 2 3 € s fpe Q. TIs it all right for a voung man who has been dancing with a girl A v A B fi v } " ! Welles appointed committees of and go across the river; unable to The Washinglon experts to formulate the world slep for thinking of his and his JACK BE E"v' WALTER fto ‘xn back” on the man who has taken her away from him? vk Wedsic Suinly Phone 689 machinery which later be- ntry's lest opportunities, Welles ‘This should not be done during the same dance. 3, aRLILU Wil v Merry.eo-kound came the United Nations. Hull took some sleeping tablets and w'“(HEll GOIKG Ta ; Q: Should a man “talk shop” at a dinner party? | hur M. Uggen, Maunager had written the Senate Foreign Re- \\'Ln(,jll)‘l[l(l" ;|{1| t)j:mneng:\); li)b“e';;l:xlu:‘x:: BROAD(ASI OVER KlNY A. Never; nor at any other kind of party or social gathering. The fudcal Instruments The A]askan fln”.’*’ ) PRARS! lations Committee on Oct. 21, 1942, PRy = By DREW PEARSON that He saw mo reason to begin haustion—a walk: from which he man who dces is invariably considered a bore. and Sopplies A G - g At et » 204 ESecond and Seward Newly Renovated Reoonse | R el i) o o inery was not to come back for a long, B | Contiivved frcm Page Omne worrying about peace machinery 8. Tomorrow the Alaska Broadcast-| ¥ e — — — until after the war. But Welles be- long time. i b at Bessonable I . 3 2 vill inaugurate the Y S o & hould fol- Cordell Hull, looking down from W g '_0 0 K n L INKE OFEN 1 no war, wanted to enter the State lieved the United States s { i ¢ ser esularly scheduled INKE GENERAL P e Department where he could make 1oW the practios of the smart iaw- |the tower of the Novyl Hospital at et ol e A. C. GORDON ! "DAIR SHGP FHONE SINGLE his dreams come true. So Frank- Yer who collects his fee while his the prostrate, half-frozen flgmf gf continental United St - Welding, Plumbing, Ol Burner o e Y ¥ 3 ) o ient’ s i should his old rival, could have conclud- " " 5 3 . saoum At g e 3 lin Rooscé at whose wedding Sf‘fi’l‘: 5”":“‘;:] :1’: ;}"tpeaxe l;“’::} o Vike his father, that he had Are those starring Jack Benn; . Who said, “There never was a good war or a bad peace”? Tack: Wotk PHONE 555 Weiles ha a pageboy, help- |Sett ) Walter Winchell, and will be heard | . What is didactic poetry? GENERAL REPAIR WORK : d hin At pretRoR U gued, while Russia had her back “got his man.” Or could it be that ' 3 it e ] § ed him en diplomatic ser- | BUSS, N0 R s M., Hull ab 16ng last. will'say: thak b BRA sudn S . Who was the most famous violin maker of all time? Faeme 208 w9 w. 12m s~} || 1f1OMas Hardware (o an old score is now more than ¥ . What great city was once known as Byzantium? e e — e = EAINTS — OILS S o5 . Hull, in poor health, was {re: “ A network broad 5 pri | From that day until 1943, no one Qb v 3 o e V] i i @ werked harder at making his peace QUently away. During his absenc led, thal DRBREgeL IETR S ident Trum 5. Of whom did Shakespeare say: “Age cannot wither her, nor || HOME AND INDUSTRIAL Builders’ and Shelf o 5 i >1 han personalities; so let Wi s custom stale her infinite variety’? 1 3 } o 5 Welles proceeded with the peace- 8 of the Nation” address on Janua riety”? IARDWARE } than Sumner byeones be 2 s 5 5 | o finest o |Plan_committees for which Hull bysones be bygones A the baskathall games Gf thel ANSWERS INSULATION S MR - . o sery- | 20t the credit. | University of Wa n on Fri< 1. Benjamin Franklin (1706-90). . | £ 2 and training. He serv- |, opoTin the summer of 1943, ©c e c e @ > gy nn;llssnurduy evenings at 10:15 2. Instructive or moral poetry. ROl st U M Remington Typewriters , Argentina, the Carib- | LB& 0 T i 3 8 e A5 4 X 3 WEATHER STRIPPING SOLD and SERVICED by He was in Santo Domingo ull ed an ultimatum on ‘ - during January and February. This! 3. Antonius Stradivarius (1644-1737). Warde A. Johnson—Phone 344 | TIDE TABLE : J. B. Burford & Cs. nes were in control, | Roosevelt that either he or Welles afterncon a play-by y ount Istanbul, or Constantinople. futility of military oc- | st €0: T of the Rose Bowl aiwill ;b Cleopatra, in “Antony and Cleopatra.” “Our Doorstep Is Worn by ) : | He becam eat friend | Lroadcast from Pasadena, with Mel 3 g £ 2k R £ -t 5 R i sty 4 e High tide, 4:03 am., 15.1 ft. at the microphone. Game time — = ihe Charles W Carler Satistied Cnstomers Low tide, 9:44 am., 41 ft. e 5 o'clock. EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED Mortuary ekt High tide, 15:37 pan., 165 ft. e B o AGENCY . Ot Low tide, 22:15 pm., -0.6 ft. SMALL SNOW SLIDE DR. D. D. MARCUARDT Pourth and-Franklin Sta E O,AIE,,},)O,M; ‘i')el:lt:‘:s‘("‘ Caribbe small snow slide oceursed onl PR klPPTOMETRIST PHONE 138 GREASES — GAS — (1L A~ 4 ’ i econd and Franklin Junaci kil A on t T\;e ':fldcflg:xl-s:fi PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS Card B c Jn:le‘alz n?igls(:r 0. satTE m— - Lara peverage Lo. ‘oot of Main Sticet mall area but it blocked the roadway. The City's rotary Wholesale £65 10th B8 WELLES WATCHED MILI- TARY DIPLOMACY Welles bawed out gracefully, but he has never been happy since. He has pretended to be bus; He has written books, a weekly column, helped organize charity and educa- tant tional projects. But his heart has » had i not been in his work. lomacy became Presi Across the Potomac from his Low tide, 22:50 p.m., 0.3 ft. United Stat S Maryland home, Welles can see— e o0 o v 0 0 0 0 0 sncw plow was put to work yes- Lot e W .M.AK.E became his most trusted |on the Virignia side—the National e orday on the slide and had the Oldest Bank in Ala k NE 216—DAY or i JUNEAU DAIRIKES adviser Airport, where Jimmy Byrnes land- Flexible Flier Sleds at Madsen’s. snocw cleared away in short or- SKa for MIXEKS or SCDA FOP DELICIOUS ICE CREAM prozressed, however. ed after his historic mission t0 Open noon until 6. 2 daily habit—ask for it by namse to those on the Moscow; where Secretary Marshall — . . & ate Departmen: Bedell Smith, General Clay and ‘ 1891—0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1949 Casler's ien's Wear ||| Juneau Dairies, Inc. that, while ull took the the others who now formulate Crossword Puzzie g AR Yornerly SAEBIN'E JANUARY 3 High tide, 4:30 am., 149 ft. Low tide, 10:25 am, 43 ft. High tide, 16:14 p.m., 15.5 ft. E START OF A FEUD e® 98000600 C0006 €00 e0eevc00scscvc e official bows &s Secretary of State, American foreign policy go to and Chrysler Marine Engines it it Welles who really fro on their unsuccessful missions s Th B M B l‘l d g Stetwon snd Maliory Bats AcROSS 2. Hulstln | € e, « EDCHICIEGS JAioon e Ml T MACHINE SHOP formulate ign ‘policy. And to win the peace. Bkt olsliain machines | 4 from eveloped one of \V":\sh- Sumner Welles used to ‘bc the . Church sittings .(ae‘r;‘l;lulzl‘lrk:‘: €] Allen Elosands Brask . Marine Hardware ington terest personal feuds man who made those trips. All . Bone of the At Qe time ; Welles and Hull agreed his life he trained and slaved and o . Rock MEENGE I — ___yl.um- Chas G Wm'ner C;,_ Ocean i many things, Theirs was chief- studied the know-how of world | j " Sauadron e e e b bewmo o fhie RES L SOTIY , - Safety Peposit . it lig g spee r s, 1 nauestio G v veong s e 7 e s e e | 1 B NERRSRE s e B TIMELY CLOTHES | HOME CROCERY One could drop in on FDR |bank of the Potomac, watching ‘4 > 7] < 2 P Ph 146 NUNN-BUSH SEOES one &rd work cut o policy in fifteen | generals-turned-diplomats fumble Rrass ¢ minutes; the other settled down |wiih the diificult, elusive, desperate . e sheso Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle COMMERCIAL SAVINGS STETSON HATS e : in the President’s office for end- problem of peace. , DOWN T g 1 meul:uor nhm;:t.: American Meat — Pho y less conversation % . American lake i So the President came to depend | CORDELL HULL'S REVENGE d - . . Gained - Quality Work Clothing the younger, faster-thinking Cordell Hull's father, living in “ / A - Quter garment = z 0 I men Tennessee at the close of the Civil 7 / . Open a bottle § R In addition, basic differences de- War, got into a fracas with a man ' . .. . g‘l’;:l‘:‘lfr;"'d LAm Pnnm | rnzn mnmn C loped over stopping Japan in the who beat him up and threw him organ as a paid-up subseriber to THE DAILY ALASKA Complete Ouifitter for Men SYSTEM CLEANING nd moves to check Hitler over a river bank. Old man Hull Insects S W . : 0 . Ventilates EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING ! in Eurcpe. Welles, seeing the ed thirty years, tracked his foe - ¢ l\t‘lr:;:l; Prosent this enupon to the box offies of the Alaska LaundY 8 war clouds six years before Pearl down to Alabama, walked up to s IFE 7 witchings 7 W R CAPITOL THEATRE B. ¥ CORLING || om nooeicr snieson Harbor, drafted Roosevelt’s famous re he sat on a.front porch and . “guarantine” speech proposing pre- |shot him. 27 128 e e tative measures to block Japan.| His son, NOW @ permanent resi- . /%m. .Hflfl LR, | cmuY OPTUHEuIST Hull finally reversed this policy— |dent of the Naval Hospital, has o .///a. [ERRER it ot and receive TWO TICKETS to see: i e o < | jeaving U. . delegates high and ¢rowled and rumbled every time /A gpcertain plant b Dedge—Flymov b“"m"”m“‘ yes Examined—Glasses Fitted | dry at the Brussels Conference mner Welles' name came up for . e "m m rlm cunmo DeSoto—Dodge SIMPSON BUILDING { (Onz of the stolen State Depart- ible appointment as an am- . . B ke ¥ ¥ —— Phone 266 for Appointments ment documents still unpublished bassador, commissioner to Pales- |/ / .. Luzon tribe Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre SHAFFER'S : ’ ASHENBRENNER’S by Un-American Activities Com- t or trouble-shooter in Indone- ' " At & distance mittee reveals this graphically.) = Hull's vengeance never relax- VA . Garment 4_.“! nm BL “:':nn ‘:Il £And when it came to talks with That was why, in a world flfi By Pnnus 1 ll‘ g ] mflu‘ "u'l' m mn Hitler and Mussolini to head off whcre men with know-how are so : .Co;ngxnulnd to and an insu; cab WILL CALLFOR YOU and. . VOR BETTER ME\TS < war, Hull resented the fact the. .ca:c-, Welles' very great abilities 7 . / 43 Silkworm RETURN YOU to your home with-cur-compliments. - 13- PHONES- 49 i NITURE the vigorous Welles was sent on Weic never used. > B e s e “Appear! 5 Deltvery PonieTss m’w this important mission. So. unable to sleep for watch- | fl WAWm’?W—f“'mw ¥ . ‘ ke = He was also resentful when ing the military-diplomats come | ' {euiiian e : o g .

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