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PAGE TWO PAGE FOUR e e e e e e e e and managers. The book-making which gives rise to D(uly 41(1 shoat Empire | s oo o v samped vt O laws of most States that could be accomplished if law except Sunday by the s PO 4 ;lnmmnrm thorities were promptly vigilant. So Alackn enc | 100 as illegal commercial gambling is tolerated, the S resident Vice-President | reputations of athletes and public confidence in or- tor and Manager | T maugr and Munager | ports are in constant danger. Business Manager + G the Post Office in Juneau as ond Class Matter Those Silly Sourdoughs SUBSCRIPTION EATE | v Delivercd by carrier in Junean and Douglas for $1.50 per month; | 5 six months, $8.00; oné year, $15.00 \ (Faribanks News-Miner) postage paid, at the folloy ates: o s Pt R ing beforehand: hot. 816,00 6ix ronths, 16 sdvapos $n.60;| Here is whal they w hotid , $1.50 “Nobody in his right mind would waste a holiday favor if they rumptly DoUly | 1,y plaving football at below zero.” e of any failure or irre News Office, 602; patches credite nd PRESENTATI Al Beattle, Wa Bustness Olfice, ‘exclusively entitled to the use for s0 the 1 ska Newspapers, y in the delivery 1 watch such “Anybody who would stand ‘.z-uuml |a fiasco must be a psychopathic case “The Ice Bowl must be classed as one of the silliest | projects ever conceived in the land of the sourdough, less than rare.” h projects, the | | | 314 | e i it or not other- | news published | Where silly projects are something But, like most “silly” sourdou Bowl was a whale of a lot of fun 3 It wasn't Nc Dame vs. Michigan and it wasn't | Ice 1411 | eluttered up with celebrities making a showing. The | University Alaska and Ladd air force teams were venly matched as it is possible for two teams to be as witness the final score of 0 to 0. No cleaner ‘Auutl);«ll was on display anywhere on New Year's Day |than here. There was no penalty for any infraction of rules involving roughness or illegal use of hands | After every scrimmage, the players came up grinning at each other That is a brand of football that most people have | forgotten ever existed. | "™ e sidelines were thronged by skeptical spec- ators who came to scoff and remained to praise. The national pr made much of the Ice Bowl— mostly in a fun-poking way. It was a good laugh 11 around. of PARASITES OF SPORTS Dave the George W basketball player who says he was Shapiro throw a game, comes from Brooklyn. reporting 8 with police in n‘umnn” explain his promptness in his willingness to co-operate the four men now facing bribery charges. athlete from Brocklyn has special reason to be was there, picious of gambie For it College, that the first big basketba to light, back in 1945. came Five members of the Brooklyn team were expelled from school after they confessed to receiving $1,000 to throw a game. It was a amateur not totally discouraging dent W vashington University athletic careers ended in ignominy. for there have been subsequent reports of Let ‘em laugh. Laughter has gone out of a lot |of things that used to be good fun in the States, not | excluding football. In his brief public Ice Bowl Queen, utterance at the crowning of Brig. Gen. Dale V. Gaffney offered $1,00 That may the offer aid “well, it looks like we've started something here We have mdv( d. llege | Any cc sus- o A Worthy Begumm | (Seattle Times) | | Canada has joined the list of nations sending out nles printed material for the information of other pe inds, India are at Brooklyn 1 betting scandal Great Britain, China, The Nethei : stern lesson. Five among countries already extensively cnu,uged in this The inci- activity Canada’s addition to this literature is a monthly e bulletin called External Affairs. Harry A. Scott, Can- the gambling . ada’s Consul General in San Francisco, points out th: efforts to fix college games. But the example has|yo yeyl_edited publication is not compiled from o served undoubtedly to remind athletes that they hold |pyonaganda standpoint, but rather for its informative the key asainst the forces of corruption that are and reference value. The first number, indeed, ap- at the gates of almost any amateur or professional 'pears to confirm that statement. In that respect “1 sperts contest these days. differs distinctly from most of the offerings (]‘\ which : ; foreign governments, even when they are in dire oy o, Joe Fulks of the professonal Phila- [y, 1,001 " status, cunnmw to flood American waste- delphia Warrior basketball team and other athletes baskets. w have promptly to authorities after being 0 e : gamblers are to be commended. It is One doubts if American commies can take over y they Coaches and managers, must stress this pr fessional fields, the ga rs are ready to move in at that lh(‘ players will have any of s however, > defense ht not, can defend themselves and their in both amateur and truck with them. ports from the be left to the pl-\ in the foreseeable future. The Republicans s at it, and success is not yet in the the U. S. have been 16 ye: bag.— (Portland Oregonian.) constantly. For the slightest hint a married man can de- Are you deplor- tand how minister. “I can’t und reive his wife,” asserts a ing, parsomn, or seeking information? se ruthless para- coaches The Washinglon Merry-Go-Round vy DREW PEAR\()\ (Contirued irom Page One) By it's the same ay the T-E-W Ellender replied, in effect. ve you read it?” asked Taft. admitted the Loulsianian. n how do you know it's a bill?” demanded Taft. told me good d Ellender )r irem Ohio then ask- any public housing units bill would authorize. 2 mihute,” retorted Ellen- put the question to who apparently sit- his office. “Oh, it's a biis, in finally answered. ye asked Taft agreed the Sen- ator 1rc 1a. But he was interrur a protest from the visitor. known No, seven years,” he corrected mmself. Taft, therefore, refused to put his name to the bill until he had read and Ellender stubbornly refused to delay bill more than a day That was how the two former partners on public housing happened to part company their own separate ways ONE SOUTHERN LADY OK’S TRUMAN Truman came to civil-rights issue in the Union address, one sympathetic er—eight-year-old en President he crucial of at least who sat on the lap of her daddy, Rep. E. C. Gath- ings of Arkansas, while the spoke. white-haired man on the ned all those big words, listened profoundly t'x‘.Ll)\,‘_slu.\llulli) in the Thh caus- buthern solons ats, their hands and a funeral- froze in felded in their laps, parlor hush fell over them. But not Tolise Gathings we clapped the white-haired gentleman on the restrum just the same—until her daddy, with an embarrassed flush, reached down and caught his daughter’s hands. He didn't let her go, either, until it was safe for an Arkansas Congressman to applaud again. SISTER SENATOR SMITH Maine’s high-flying Sen. Owen Brewster is taking the bows for getting his sister -enaior, Margar- ( et and go | Presi- |wants to keep in close touch with Chase Smith, appointed to the they chipped i: I lall-powerful ~ Republican Policy to throw him ¢ Committee. What happened was IN CAPITOL CLOAKROOMS that the day before the announce- ment, Brewster ostentatiously made Sen. Ken Wherry, GOP leader in rublic a letter he had written urg- the Senate, has just had one of ing Mrs. Smith's appointment. his trade secrets given away. It The truth is, Mrs. Smith had has now leaked out that the man already been selected well before has written most of his speech- Brewster wrote the letter. And €s since 1942 is Albion Beveridge, who ran last place in Maine's Sen- she was selected, not to please Brew- Many of Wherry ster, but to appease the Republi- atorial primar can liberals. Brewster's buddy, fast questions and sharp retort Senator Taft, gave him an advance were worked out for him by Bev- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | JA.\'}K\RI{ 18 Sheila MacSpadden Mrs. Harold R. Brown William Biggs Velma McDa Mary Joyce lizabeth Kirkpatrick T. M. Moody Ray S. Stanwcod asececomscoe . LY - CONDITIONS OF WEATHER ALASKA PTS. conditions and temper wtures at various Alaska pou. also on the Pacific Coast, au 4:3 1. m., 120th Meridian Time, eleased by the “Lm.m ‘uneau, follow: Anchorage Barrow o 3 o o Weather Weather -9—Clear . -2—Pt. Cloudy Beth 24—Snowing Cor o A Dawson -20—Clear Edmonton -9—Snowin Fairbanks -30—Clear Haines 18—Pt. Cloud Havre —Mi Juneau Airport Pt, iy Ketehikan Pt. Cloudy Kodiak 17—Pt. Cloudy {ctzebue -13—Pt. Cloudy \ ith 6—Cloudy Nome Snowing Northway -35—Clear Petersburg 28—Fozgy tiand e George ttle —Missing rince 2 5 34—Sme 30—Cloudy -41—Cloudy 24—Cloudy horse vakutat -~ - o e c e a TIDE TABLL JANUARY 19 > e, 5:13 am,, 17.2 ft ° am., 15 ft. ° 6 pm., 16.0 ft. ® 36 pm., -0.2 ft. . e o e 00009 000 0 o BILLION DOLLAR BUDGET IN (M!F | I8 NTO, Jan. 17. —The Ca legislatu me ' time |this week, will go to work on a bil- lion dollar budget. | To {inance this cost of ;;mem- jment it will have to decide to vote tax i |new ta Govern Warren expects to sub- mit his budget message in the next. few He has carefull rom advance commsent [ tip that the appointment was to eridge. he will ask for—and si be made, so the resourceful Sena- But even more interesting: The Low he ses to finahe tor from Maine hastily dictated the man who spilled the beans on letter—so he could take all the Wheiry's ghost-writer is his GOP| R total will | credit. colleague — Senator Vandenberg.|re around one billion at It's | — The Republican foreign policy chief | just a question whether it will be | UNDER THE DOME zot peeved when Wherry declined |ynder of over one billion. i 3 Arthur Vandenberg's son, to step down as GOP floor leader e B S e i who has been running his when Vandenberg requested it . . . NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION | father’s office, has presented his Only persons who knows all the| Notice is hereby given that the dad with two-weeks notice. Young W Congressmen by sight is Edith | plat of U. S. Survey No. 2393, em- gely, hostess in the House res- 1t. She studied pictures of them in advance, recognized most and able, Art, Jr., is a new job with some New York public relations firms . . . A total |of 662 bills and resolutions was |dropped into the House “hopper” the opening day of Congre: New | York's Democr: tic “Manny” Celler !led with 35 measu while GOP Congressman Carl Hinshaw of Cal- ifornia intr “wced 25 . . . It was a great occas.u. for Colorado’s John Carrcll and Ohio's Representative- s dickering for . India Edwards of the of to eat Women’s Division cratic party hqs of 15 women whom she wants President Truman to name to high posts in government and the diplo- matic service. elect Stephen Young when they shook hands at the House Demo- cratic caucus. The last previous !meeting cf the two Democrats was lon Anzio beachhead, in Italy i ACROSS 3. S)“f_'l‘\););l‘)lefinr { Phil Kaiser, now in the Labor De- 1 Tetapdisis 32 Tile ! partment, will become Assistant . 33. Note {\r the e Conductor's Secretary of Labor in charge of In- o] rican humorist ternational Aff: A good man. west point If Federal Security Administrator Oscar Ewing's job isn't raised to Cabinet status, he will run for gov- ernor of New York. MERRY-GO-ROUND Last week Sen. Kefauver’s father came to Washington to watch his 1 sworn in as a member of the y eed container rved image Cype of food Rubber tree Coupled Pronoun of them the first day they came in | the Demo- ' submitted a list ;br:\cix‘.g a tract of land on Douglas | Island, addition to the | tional Forest acres, has been filed in the D Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. The plat will be officially in this office January 21, 1949, { - By reason of the withdrawal of Ithe land it is not subject to entry.: FLORENCE L. KOLB, y Acting Manager. | { m |- >& 2lz[oclaima Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle upper chamber. Remarked the eld- tlr.Kequver: “They used to refer to Estes as my son. Now I am his daddyy. That's what makes our country better—when a son is bet- ter than his daddy.” Fresh- man Congressman Harry Daven- rort of East Liberty, Pa., who oust- ed Jehn McDowell from the House, wears a yellow-colored necktie ca an for the defeat of the Taft- Hartley Law. Congressman Daven- port is pledged to wear the tie un- til the act is repealed. Senator Lyndon Johnson of Texas won a brand new Lee for his election pre- | dictions . . . New Secretary of State | Acheson is expected to resume daily press conferences, invaluable to any State Department official who | the public. . Acheson is popular with diplomatic newsmen. When | he left as Under Secretary of State, | house mouse Pronoun Light brown las Cereal grass till College degree j i D _JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESD\\ j\P‘U/\R\ 18, 1949 JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141“ st et i s e =+ | VOUNG DAUGHTER OF { RITCHIE LOVEJOYS DIES SECOND and FOURTH 20 YEA RS AG 0 Jrom IN PACIFIC GROVE, CALIF. Monday of each month % ‘ M THE EMPIRE in.Scottish Rite T("mg)l:-(\/ \ - Word has been veceived here of [begining at 7:30 p. m / oy T s o pesna-s e | the death of Katrina Lovejoy, two- ‘GLENN O. ABRAHAM, JANUARY 18, 1920 year-old daughter of Mr, and Mrs. | Worshipful Master; Cur attuck was pledged to the Sigma Delta Chi, honor Richie Lovejoy of Pacific Grove,| JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. jurnalism fraternity at the University of Washington. California. Mrs. Lovejoy is the SR, . S former Natalia Kashevaroff of Ju- l The total of the Chamber of Commerce community fund am® ,xu‘.yml‘\/f 5 ¥ '\"Jl’i.;"\ \{;“: ,l\:h(\\xll“:, B' P' 0' ELKS y,l,;.\. it \\'x:s announced today by Judge Frank A. Boyle, ¢ ™V lthe family lived in Juneau. Meeting every Wednesday at o { the Chamber. The Lovejoys have two other| g B. M. Visiting brothers wel- . ki, 4 idren, John, who is six years| come. JOSEPH H. SADLIER, p The Douglas High School basketball team downed the U v 1d, and Jennifer, who is four. d Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, a score of 25 to 10. Alex Gair was high scorer on the Island tcam » - = | Secretary. e v = Flexible Fller Sleds at adsei’s. |~ e e : The Shrine dance was to be held this night in the Scottish Rit ypen noen until 6. 9t 5 Temple. This was the first a series thr - . . 3 G 0 et Sk | Doogan Janitor Service io; e = 3 &m, nora V] . Major Douglas Hamilton Gillette of the Alaska Road Commissi Moose Lodge No. 700 Phone 574 J. M. Doogan, Owner { his bride were expected to return to Juneau on January 29 g > Washing Windows, Cleaning and | Regular Meetings Each Friday : of Floors, Skoveling of | Mrs. Katherine Hooker of th Not Tea Rooms, who had || Governor—ARNOLD HILDRE |L~'|mw and Commercial Cleaning | | n serfously ill in Seat s to Juncau on the Beocetiie: mpanied by her daughter Mi: 1dred Hooker. f WALTER R. }IERMANSEN | S L i S R O 2 S ! | Harry Sperling, Distriet Deputy of the B. P. O. E irned | B i I Juneau the previous day on the Margnita after making an off . Ber! S FGOd c nier » the Skagway Elks Lodge H S GRAVES Grocery Phones '01—105 3 : Meat Phones 39--339 { Man Weather: High, 32; low 20; clear The Clothing Ma Deliveries—10:15 A M. ; u-wm TR S ,,,.-.“A,,..-N.Nl LEVI'S OVERALLS 2:15 — 4:00 P. M for Boys e e l w ; Daily Lessons in English % i. gorpox The Rexall Store” BRERC D T Tt SRS S SR R GECRGE BROS. Your Reltable Pharmacise l ! WORDS OF ch)\i’[;\gitz\s;u Do not say, “My work is some e Widest Selection of BUTLER-MAURQ : ne Say. “is SOMEWHAT easier.” % OF MISPRONOUNCED: Italic. Pronounce first I as in IT (no EJH‘! DRUG CO. i ; in LIE), accent second PHONE 29¢ ] o R A edting. bR ] “Say Iy Wit Klower s EhuL o USINESS COUNSELLOR | . ey o Accounting-Systems-Ta>es WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is your s “QAY IT WITH OURSI e nerease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's st Florie | Sl [} 1 Rroom 3—Shattuck Bldg. OGMATISM: positiveness in assertion in matters of opini Jun“du Florists | pow, TRtbuk . elf- imy e his demeanor and the dogmatism of his con PHONE 311 i e reme £ r Walter Scott. R e | . i s e TR e ARCHIE B. BETTS |- | e BLYwWin L ect L. ! 6 Public Accountan: . MODERN ETIQUETTE #hmeria vew PUSSSSSSSTSSSSSUSD SRS PSS S S S 41 Q. Is it rude for a woman to accept a seat from a man in a public nve e without thanking him? A. It is very rude to do so. The distinguishing mark of a well- bred p n, man or woman, is the gracious manner in which he ac- urtesy m should an v a church wedding offer a woman as he her down the A T arn the more convenient. Q. Is it correc knowledge an introduction with “Glad to know you"? A. No. hen doubt, you can never go wrong with “How do you e A S i ] e e oo i i 'f_..—_—_v.-———- S ——— LOOK 1. What U. S. city y and the most southern has been called nerthern city? 2. How many lines are there in a sonnet? 3. Where do the best emeralds in the world come from? 4. What is sophistry? 5. Who was the Philistine woman who betrayed Samson? ANSWERS: 1. Cincinnati, Ohio. 2. Fourteen. 3. Colombia, South Africa. 4. Fallacious reascning. 5. Delilah. Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1949 The EB, B, Behrends Bani Safety Deposit BRoxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS and LE RN % ¢ cornon nerthern southern LEONARD LOWELL 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: “THE STATE OF THE UNION" bFederaI Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre PHONE 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! Plumbing © H:afing 0il Burners felephone-319 Nights-Red 730 Harri Machine Shop, Inc. o | HEINKE GENERAL Office in Case Lot Grocery | PHONE 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL | and STORAGE TENCED MEN 11 EXPE JANTYORIAL FRED FOI Phene Service 247 'v‘j ¥ * VTR N T pPTAD READ Strect ADT u»1 ) Y Beward Near Third Rlaska Pianos—NMusical Instruments and Sopplies Phone 208 Second and Seward REPAIR SHOP | Piambing, Ol Barnes chsmith Work ENERAL REPATR WORK Fhane 2 Weiding, 929 W. 126h Ei Juneau Janitor Service || Home and Commercial Cleaning Earl J. Conkle Phone §06 = s The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Powrth and Mranglic FHONE 138 Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th B Sis PHONE 218—-DAY or NiGHT for MIXERS er ECDA POP Casler’s Men's Wear Pormerly SABIN'S Btetson and Mallory Hate Arrow Bhirts and Underwear Alter: Edmonds Shoes Bkyway Lugrage TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSP SHOES STETSCN HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitier for Men B. W. COWLING COMPANY -Plymouth—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT ¥OR BETTER ME\TS 13—PHONES- -49 Pree Delivery Auditor Tax Counser - Simpson Sldg. Phone 757 FOR Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 548 i ¥red W. Wenat Juneau’s Finest Liquor Store BAVARD’S Phone 689 The Alaskan Holel Newly Renovaied Rooms st Ecasonable Rates FEONE BINGLE O PHONE 555 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’' and Bhelf HARDWARE Remington Typewritera SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS -- OWL Juneau Moior Co. Foot of Main Street S — MARE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM & daily habit-—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHCP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Btore--Tel, 683 Aweriean Meat — Phone S8 To Banish “Blue Mondav" To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry DR. ROBERT SIMPSON CPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitied SIMPSON BUILDING Phone 266 for Appointments ASHENBRENNER'S NEW AKD USED FURNITURE Puone 788 _ 143 Willoughby Ave