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PAGL FOUR Daily PRINTING -7 -7 - 7 Managing S e ol D DM AL RPE Eisenhower Returns . the Post Office in JA; u as Second Class Matter. - b SUBSCRIPTION : (Washington Post) . ; e e Ordinarily the purposes of higher educatiol are|® Mrs. H. M, Porter s ng rates: 760, Dot served when a university president subordinates|® Georse H. L mp i el o his administrative duties to outside activities. But ® Shirley Geddes s ribers will ¢ hey will promptly BOUSY | certainly an exception must be made in the case of ® Sigrud Swanson al Eisenhower, who recently assumed the acad- | ® Bert Johnson News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. emic toga as pre umbia University. Be- |® Shirley Westby T MEMBER OF JCIATED PRESS cause of his ur and stature, General ® Joan Lois Cohen 1o, The Associsted Press entitled to the use fot | Eisenhower h 2y algiser to thefle1 (e & SL B IRGISIES 8l . d paper cal news published | Secretary of Defer urgency of the occesion - e makes his services particularly welcome. | ) L ¥ Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Probably the or Eisenhc 5 (0“@'!!0“ Y Ave € lat will be the n which it = T |necessary | compromising [ner orienta OF WEATHER - Alaska Empire IT TOOK A LONG, LONG TIME e e e e e porary organizaior Republican, did a tay by the Peratrovich, First Division car aware, too, of the Editor | . sort of ex-officio capaci nity ned with that can spe can command in the Joint -~ fine job as President Pro Tem. — With James Nolan, Speaker of the House, Frank | ™== President {1 hould be J«'Ul‘lll' ting demands of |he is raduate of one . he is beyond parti and will doubtless be regarded and act as a defense policy as a Administration e from operatior 1, Senator Engebreth, Third Division of the Senate, certainly proud of these executives, but 1 be ir responsibilities. Chief of Staff. ty General Eisenhower will have | Weather conditions and temper- to raise the performance and pres- TeS- | atures various Alaska poir int Chiefs of Staff—a performance which | 0“0 "o py .t 430 adt Commission has called disappoint & i 1%0in AIAMATES BaRk and compelling need is for a body whose members S Senihos Bure the whole. Or ak firmly in terms of unified strate- | the respect of other top agencies The evolution of such a con- | Chiefs of Staff depends on their They must be first and last Senate is organized with Frank Peratrovich, |strategic planners 0o leave to subordinates the |Fairkanks t and First Divisicn Senator, as President for Imzuled job of administration and the carrying out of | Havre 2 : tion of the special session. | Joint jefs of Staff decisior If General E! neau Airport HEHAn After five days, nineteen ballots and an executive | lower can encourage the growth of genuinely inte- | 2OGIE . 1/ of ‘ths Sanafe. §ocord ‘Was accomplished be- | Braded top-level thinkir he will make another 'Kotzebu 7 o 6 il AR Jle and lasting contribution to the defense of | McGrath tween Democrats and Republicans who had been 2l - 1 5 It States N voting lines, each side refusing to give the | EOR Northway X te that would have made the count 9 to 7 , i 9 Petersbur P is Be Progress? 5 g o1 P of 8 to 8, or 8 to 6 and 2. No matter, it took, ! Can This Be Portland 2i—Pt. ‘ , those nineteen ballots, at least 9 votes to elect | T Prince George 3—Cloudy ; | (Denver Pos Seatile 19—Pt. Cloud: er the decislons of the executive session,| Styles in youthful ambitions For ex- 39—Rain, F | ir e SN * {ample: ia . R ErRPenc belng cho ‘,“‘1 : " Youngster of 1900—To grow up and be President. | yakut Frank Peratrovich was not elected by a| younggter of To grow up to be a Barney S LSS m 9 to 7 vote, but by the unanimous vote of the l(l!di\\‘l(l. ESKlMO EH}upEB IN # ! members. who have of the 19th followed these Youngster of 1920 S Youngster of 1928 first da have | Lindbergh. Youngs Legislature AT i of a bootlegger. a Charles A To grow up to be To grow up to t SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 1 To grow up to be a farmer bee the session, its organization, I i 3 L 1 the bills to troduced and passed were thought to 2nd get paid for not raising p C uJIn] ‘!31. a, n(l‘ it ey ¥ B .d up chead of time. Else, why call Youngster of 1942--To grow up to be a Gener : : i A e S R e M oAt « 'brain injury when he fell from el o e Youngster of 1945—To grow up to be an atomic|a moV car in San Antonio, mi good old party lineup appeared | ... ..ice Texas is confined to the 1 surprising and definite strength. Youngster of 1948—To grow up to play the guitar | Broak ral Hospital in San the te is organized and the Legisla- | ;,q ke a multi-million-dollar fortune like Gene | Ant ording to wires re- t can get t In the meantime, during tem- | Autr: ceived here is in a serious condi- e - — e - ——— - tion. The Washingion berry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON jed from Page One) the his after all Usually ive hi dyvice c had finished, to Congress just as hard Deal sections cess. His “Don’t you too far, think Presi- soft- from der W down New s:ch—without caution, going a little 1 don't ht to that, Mr. brought an equally n but positive rejoiner man in aquestion. replied Mr. Truman, to do it this way.” net members united as or do E: eam to tone down the State C ssage, especiall ref > corporate taxes—Sec- 1 of Defense Forrestal, Sec- awyer, Acting ett, and Sn) de Wi together beau- t conferenc w T that he never 1 t were up to did not weaken. His was: people veted they're going her change e Election much more vs on Capitol went by last ut a conference with 1 Sam Rayburn, but 1 has had em in for ent conferenc even call- er Ra 1 personally ork 1 the led month « iends that are compromises to e, h em; for he traffic can bear. t campaign esident told committee Barkley and leaders be- an - contin- b comes easiest ft districts and where they don't have to aign I campaigned in 105t every ditsrict,” he added, “and I know what le are watching this Con- obviously is why Truman is it, too. He can't afford tc ther fiasco the 8otk ss on his 1 MERRY-GO-ROUND Secre y of the Interior Krug has been making gentle overt toward having his undersecretary, O Chapman, appointed Am- k dor to the Philippines. He's afraid Oscar might replace him in the Cabinet . . . Aiding and abet- ting Krug is his old friend, Senator of Anderson New Mexico. Republican Congressmen, | Stefan of Nebraska and Jensen of | Clinton Two Ic were embarrassed last week | to find their names bein used | to help sell $1000-a-page ads in a Truman “Inaugural Al- bu the man th tried to de- | t. Album turned out to be a ancy promotion scheme by some New Yorkers who had nothing to do with the inaugural . . . Dictator Franco is taking seriously the U. S. Army talk about setting up ba in Spain. He is constructing new buildings abcut the size of our giant Pentagon to house the Span- sh Air Force—though Spain has only about 100 military planes of its own (Uncensored reports tell of new Spanish guerrilla war- fare against Fr 00 o e te Department has been squawking sver Truman’s plan to carry out the Democratic platform pledge and recognize Israel . . . Six Nor- | wegian labor leaders, here on a so- | called inspection trip, actually are gathering first-hand fa about | the USA so as to counteract the Red e in Norway. The Rus- | sians are trying to capture the Nor- wegian labor movement in order to euchre Norway out of the North Atlantic Pact. ARMY INTE During the war Ar crs were plagued with fa intelli- gence reports—such as the one that had President Truman in a dither last spring and which caused him to make the Kansas City speech about division inside the Krem- lin. | Chief of Staff Gen. Omar Brad- ley suffered on2 of the worst set- backs in the Battle of The Bulge as a result of a bad intelligence report, with the result he privately confid “If I had believed my in-’ telligence reports, I would still be shivering on the Normany beach- head.” LIGENCE | comm that that all UNDER THE DOME secret but signit shortly after Senator was elected President Pro the Senate, he and his Tennessee cohorts were gently reminded that they hadn’t contributed a penny to 1t that, McKellar Tem of the Democratic campaign chest either during or since the cam- paign. So McKellar got busy and ed $30,000 for the Democratic National Committee just before the Senate voted on him (Mc- Kellar now tells the Whité House that it was he, not Kefauver, who carried the state for Truman. Ex-Secretary of War Harry Wood- ring of Kansas is back in Wash- ington. ' According to the diplo- matic grapevine, he has an eye on the American Ambassadorship to Prance . . . William “Fishbait” Miller had his wife on the payroll of Mississippi’s Congressman Col- s mer right up until the Democratic caucus made him House door- kee| though she did little or no work in Colmer's office. “Fish- bait” claimed he had to do it to make both ends meet. . . . If Sen- ator Kilgore of West Virginia gets was travelling with two mn 0. K for 1 tion, a o will st roposed lobby! of the to stu precsure boy be running for b cover uggested (facetious- 2Or ly) that lobbyists be identified in the future by being regired to wear e T HEARD tail-coats and high silk hats N ey MICE IN THE SENATE el % fir ths Tarit Stray mice and homeless coch-{ ., &t Diviglon; roaches scampered around the Sen-| 5o e ate Office Building last week fright- |1, (ne Mg Estatel of ening lady stenog hers and hunt- ing new places to hide. PUBLIC NOTIC They were flushed out by tne ac- | grygEN A. Williams, tivity of moving new Senators In|agminjstratrix with the will an.| ind old Senators out. Strange pexeq of the estate of Elizabeth C.! as it may seem—or not seem—the |gey deceased, filed. with e pests had made their homes right | probate Court for the Juneau pm_i in the private sanctu es with First Division, Territory of the Senators themselves | 5 her Final Report and Ac- Reason: The Senators eat in their | count such Administrator, and offices and spill crumbs. Mean- |t)at the Court has ordered that the while, Senate housekeepers € 0! time and place for the he dered more potent cockroach pois on. |F e hour of ten .- - |o at the Court MRS. TREVOR DAVIS Room of the Probate Court in the ory of Alaska, place town of Juneau, Te at which time interested the file objections to t FRACTURES WRIST BONE Mrs, Davis fractured a ght wrist when Trevor small bene in her she slipped and fell on the ice last | N 2. FUE GLYEAY, ; [That at said time and place the evening. Mrs. Davis was on h""‘(:vun will determine who the dis way to the Scottish Rite Temple to | or, oo orarine Who e 5% | tributees of the estate of said de- as musician for the installa- | ; 5 sed are and any y 1, firm on ceremonies of the Eastern Star corporation may a d file \d the Mas e fall occurr: Rt plilee 4 d the Masons. ‘The fall occurred | j,ir claims and proofs of heirship. I home on Sixth Street. ! Dtaed at Juneau, Davis reported this morning day of December, this his wife was resting comfort- | HARRIET A. W ably in St. Ann's Hospital. Dr. C. Adr C. Carter is the attending physi- | First publication, Dec cian. | Last publication, Jan. Alaska, this 24th Mz, stratrix. 30, 1948. ACROSS 1. Past 4. Mot pro- essional . Kind of fruit Small candle Wrath Greels letter before event Any monkey Commerce Ovpening out %4 7 | ALASKAPTS. .- A seven-pound baby boy was t St. Ann’s Hospital. Wea » 1 Daily Lessons in tween mall car that Mr. Norris was Sixth he occupants were thrown through the top and the car came (0 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU, ALASKA from JANUARY 11, 1929 and his son, Marlin, narrowly escaped serious it driving and Seventh Streets on the fter rolling over twice. he limenting a shower was ed ther WORDS OFTEN MI checking their OFTEN W he earth put | MODERN ETIQUETTE PESSTINSESISESE CEUTITUSIT IS S PSS TSSO rity h ed W Swanson High, 43; low, 41; MISPRONOUNCED; ONYMS diversit WORD STUDY: se our vocabula forth the verdant cader basketball game was to be played this n 'and girls’ basketball teams of Juneau High f J-Hi's teams were pepped up for a win ag had trounced them the k before. to Juneau gardeners. The lawns an emerald green. M John Mcl es were at least three inches high & n he noticed that scme enc 1g of inches high. M whose marri w. on given by Mrs Engstrom, My Brothers Grocery on Ic iD: Do figures.” not Amphitheater. Pronc t syllable, and not en (demeanor). M discrimi; ariation. mes and it ipal Difference, ring one nts or g s."—Miltc n. by of the bulbs in the Chapman ¢ ord each da 5 ered 20 YEARS AGO THE EMPIRE | plunged over the s Main and inst lin reporte d T age n to Mrs. Severin Swanson the prev 1s associated with his r Front Street. Enalish 3 . corpon pent unce am a XOBERTA LEE Street been a subje ling numerous | ma rden wer the b: IMAINDER OF fi- the- F 0 - U 9 © e c o 8 o ° i TIDE TABLL ¥ . & . ‘e JANUARY 12 . ~~""|e Hizh tide, 0:19 am, 13.1 ft. e o Low tide, 5:41 am, 54 ft. ® J ¢ High tide, 11:40 am, 164 ft. ® Low tide, 18:3¢ p.m, -1.1 ft. ® Hill. [ ® H s o0 008 8000 000 - oo — NOTICE ving purchased on Jan. 4, all Cesar, estaur= t th e ¢ nee the Q. Is it all right to reply to an invitation by writing the accept- or regrets on one’s visiting card? A. Never; t wck of appreciation, and is Q. Sheuld radishes, olives, pickles, or anything of the placed on the bread-and-butter plates before the meal? A. No; bread and butter are the only things to place on this plate. | _. Q. Does the bl or the bridegroom t, the church and the clergyman? A. The bride. ’ .o {1 Whose duty {of the 100K and LEAR United State 2. What is tk cipal freight pri ey e e by A. C. GORDON | it to administer the oath of office to the President arried by railroads? 3. What country’s queen was killed in an automobile accident in What is a table In what opera is er?2 Anvil Chorus” sun; d’hote dir the famous ANSWERS: Chief Justice of the S 4. 5. ! 2. Coal 3. Belgium. eme Court. g2 P 4. A meal for which one pays one all-inclusive price, instead of EYES EXAMINED eparate prices for each dish. 5. “Il Trovatore,” by Giuseppe Verdi. BR. D. D. MARQUARDT Second and Franklin D e LENSES PRES CRIBED | L3 J 1891—@ver Hall a Cenfury of Banking—1949 The 3. M. Bebhrends COMMERCIAL Banik Safety Peposit Boxes for Rent SAVINGS Wholesale e e e | M “Say it Witk Toose Lodge No. 700 Regular Mcetings Each Friday RNOLD HILDRE H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys Widest Selection of IRUORS PHONE 209 L wers” but all EXPERIENCED MEN Near Third Alaska Music Supply Bay Artour Uggen, Manager Manos—Mnstcal Instruszents and Svpplies hone 206 Second and Seward M. HEINKE GENERAL REPAIR SHOP elding, Piombing, ON Blacksmith Wotk GENERAL REPAIR WORK 204 929 W. 12¢th 8. hor uneau Janitor Service Home and Commercial Cleaning OPTOMETRIST Earl J. Conkle Phone §06 Juneau i PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTME i ':—""—“—' — i FE ———"" i| The Charles W. Carter R R Mortuary urth and kranklin &ts. Oldest Bank in Alaska __ PHONE 1 Card Beverage Co. 805 10th St PHAONE 2i6—-DAY or NIGHT tor MIXERS or SODA POP | Casler's Men's Wear TIMELY CLOTHES S | ! ‘ as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA ESTELL WOLF EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING | Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE “NIGHT SONG" and receive TWO TICKETS to see: Federal Tax——12¢—Paid by the Theatre PIONE 14—THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C9. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Newspaper Advertising! I R B e S Formerly SAPIN'S Stetson and Mallory Hais Arrew Shiris and Underwesr Allen Edmonds Shoex Bhyway Luggsge NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED BENKIKG Complete Outfitter for Men 8. W. COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymoutb—Chrysier DeBoto—Dodge Trucks SANITARY MEAT ¥OR BETTER MEATS 13—PRONES- 49 Pres Delivery ' TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, | i o e § Bernz: | | PAINTS — OIL8 il. Buiiders' and Sheit | HARDWARE 7 | ~ || Remington Typewriters |¥ | FORD AGENCY |” 04 949 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE N@, 147 N SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month In Scottish Rite Temple beginning at,7:30 p. @, WILLIS R. BOOTH, Worshipful Master; JAMES LEIVERS, .Secretary. B.F.0.ELKS W dnesday at brothers wel- SADLIER ited Ruler. W. H. BIGG Doogan Janitor Servie. Phonte 574 J. M. Doogan, ( Washing Windows, Cleanin ||, Bert's Food € Grgeery Phones 101105 f Meat Phones 39— [ Deliveries—10:15 A. M. 2:15 — 4:00 P, " ' ' 1 ""The Rexall Store’ Your Reliable Pharmaciet i BUTLER-MAURO i DRUG CO. | | H 351 | 3—Shattuck Bldg. i | ARCHIE B, Public Acco Aaditor Tax Counserer Simpson :3ldg Plhcne TOR Wail Paper Ideal Paiai Shop Ph c 549 Wenat § Fred W Juneau’s Finest \ Liquor Store | The Rlaskan Hotel 5‘ Newly Henovated Rooms »% Reasonable Rater FHONE SINGLE © PHON! Thomas Hardware (o. * BOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Buzford & Co. “Our Doersten Is Worn by (Authorized Dealers) GREAS - GAS — OIL Junean Mofor 0o, Foot of Main Street MARE DEJI‘,li,gIP(})[I\TU DAIRIES JS ICE CREAM & daily habit—ask for it by mx Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Kngines PY MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware g «kbas, G. Warner Co. * HBME GROCERY ' 0 ¢ Phone 146 l "méme Liguor Btore--Tel 883 American Meat — Phone 38 ZORIC |” SYSTEM CLEANING ! Alaska Laundy | o 'DR. ROBERT SIMPSON |~ GPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted SIMPSON BUILDING ¥ | Phone 266 for Appointments . *ASHENBRENNER’S - || NEW AND USED |9 FURNITURE |- Phone 788 142 Willoughby Ave.