The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 11, 1949, Page 4

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i i PAGE FOUR ——————————————————————————————————————————————————— : A : A Daily Alaska Empire Fublished every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska { TROY MONSEN - - - - President | control and owne: DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - - Vice-President WILLIAM R. CARTER - - - Editor and Manager FLMER A, FRIEND - - - - Managing Editor | r)j ALFRED 7ENGER - - - - Business Manager reliance. et - reer dependents. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES for its traditiona! It is cc 1, glorious creed. And it finds the once-so-firm foundations of its temple crumbling. “The fact is known of all men. “Here too, in our America, the State is taking rship of the people. It is using the power to tax to destroy their independence and self- onverting free men into vassals and It is devourin® the substance of self- | supporting people to render them self-supporting no Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per monthi | |onocr and to establish a condition of universal reli- six months, $£.00; one year, $15.00 By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One vear, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; one month, in advance, $1.50 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify he Business Office of #ny failure or irregularity in the delivery o their papers, Telephones areat rupts absolutely. News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for vepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- viction, herein NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Fourth-Avenue Bldg, Beattle, Wash. God Hates a It should shar (S i A country other day be stove. that school. se | vices, even in thi central heating. ~ | nickel-plated rin RETURN TO AMERICAN CREED tarian. power does corrupt Pot-Bellied Stoves ance upon the biased paternalism of a Great White Father—a “Father” corrupted and corrupting, since absolute power cor- | and “And the Republican Party has not dared resist the tide; it has gone along with it. but out of cowardice. Wice credited in this paper and aiso the local news published | Tl oy T v o b urnoce and make it known ... Not cut of con- It has not dared to Coward! is the title of the editorial. me us all. Not just the Republicans. St. Louis Star-Times) | school in,Oregon was dismissed the someone had stolen the pot-bellied Chances are it was the last of its kind for | Once the standard heating unit of one- room schools, country stores and the like, the pot- bellied stove is giving way to more decorative de-| ose places that have not come to Tts cast-iron body, free from gs and handles that marked its counterparts in country living rooms, was strictly utili- In a drafty school, its heat rarely extending to the An editorial in the Omaha World-Herald that .o e on a cold day, but there was a measure of Fulton Lewis regarded so highly that he read it'comfort for dista over a recent broadcast has caused national comment. spots that showed at the coal line. warmth in the crossroads store dictated ‘the number of chairs the proprietor needed to provide for loafers. Na- One who found himself crowded outside the circle of A subscriber heard the broadcast, sent it in for edi- torial use. Written as a call to arms to the Republican dle tional Committee in session in Omaha, there is much ‘s“pe;'sh:“;;c: 73 in the editorial to which everyone who has drifted has not been m along with™ the rising tide of statism can respond; hesting engineers have devised. men’s conversation is an American tradition. In its occasional moods of smoking or failing to draw, it could be condemned made up to it quickly when the fit had passed, es- pecially on a winter’s day. everyone who has given up the fight because of its gon hopelessness; cveryone who has let himself go along with the trend “toward the omniponent state” because the trend is too strong to combat. nt-seated pupils in viewing the red Thq limit of its rarely tarried long. warm cold hands or dry wet feet, it hatched by anything that modern Its warming effect unmercifully. But one For anyone who ever THE DAILY ALASKA EM FEBRUARY 11 2000009500t 000060TnE0 Mrs. Eddie Rolle J. C. Thomas Charles G. Burdick Mrs. Harvey L. Clark Mrs. J. B. Burford Helen Beukers David M. Alexander s J. Edwards Glen Kronquist Horace Adams, Jr. . Leota Smith Dorothy Louise Robards Mrs. Henry Mygatt Mrs. Severin H. Swanson Phoebe Ann Logan Violet Crosby e o v v s 0 o ¢ B HOUSE | With all its virtues, the chief of which was fthat | MEASURES it could be brought to intense heat in a matter ofwl minutes, it was ugly. 18TH DAY, FEB. 10 | (Measures Introduced) | H. B. 49, by Rep. Conright, re- ‘L’ardlng eligibility of persons to ‘serve as members of Territorial Boards and Commissions; prohibit- ing the appointppent of members of the Legislature to such posi- | tions. ] H. B. 50, by Reps. Franklin and McCutcheon, to provide for defray- ‘ng certain expenses of the Dele- | gate from Alaskd, appropriating | $2500 for the period ending March 131. 1951 i (Measgres Passed) | Committee Substitute for H. B. 19, to set Maximum hours and Min- It is a long editorial, but from it we can take its thawed himself at a pot-bellied stove there can be | it gtk T B cry for a return to an American creed. ... 'The Republican Party has lacked the courage to say what its rank and file believes. Out of hunger | for the flesh pots it has lacked the patriotism, the hand: Joyalty, to stand up for the free Republic of the at long founding fathers and to fight for it. Due to that lack foy an inside strai of moral courage, of loyalty to the American creed, the United States, almost the sole remaining bulwark | against spokesman, without a champion “A Colorado to proclaim and battle of him. The Washingfon ; r. an’'s Military Aide. Merry-Go-Round it ot e vl Al § lzave that medal. He knew that By DREW PEARSON | its acceptance would be interpreted ‘Contirued tram Pag One’ I\he and the White House are as throughout Latin America as mean- ling Truman himself had given his | blessing to the ceremony. He knew |that it would strengthen his hand tine Embassy. The funny thing was | mmeasurably-—strengthen it to con- that I have probably spent more hours and days inside that same undercutting the United Embassy than anyone else in Wash- mgton. 7 tinue | States. | That's why I took the trouble to give some publicity to the fact |that there were afew people in this | country who objected strenuously S § « whbn |to having the White House linked That was back in the days when | i Wgiotator Peron. And in or- 1 was writing for La Nacion of | 7 2 r Buenos Airesgnnd when Argentina, der to publicize this objection in then a democracy, was trying {o |the press of Latin America, it was strengthen its tles with the United hecessary - to dramaiise i6; States. something spectacular—such We had some distinguished Ar- picketing the Argentine Embassy. gentine Ambassadors in those days, ¥ S i ‘hcluding Pelipe Espil and before INSIDE THE EMBASSY him Honorio Puyerredon. They Incidentally, here was something B i iy afvhon Wit et e (M. P.cdossDE know shoubtyet, Etatés fThey wlgoiousty popdked our | 880 had Gne of my asslatants in. high -protective tariff, especially iside the Argentine Embassy during | 9 o are e it Shetiotiith oniMieat AN lfal-|Ui® Vaughsn party, Here are the ONCE DEMOCRATIC ARGENTINA as e {notes he wrote after the shindig ia. But they kept things on a e clean, aboveboard level. There was | ™" ? y “Very few dignitaries present, no unreasonable military force wav- | i . y !Yeur vigil at the door must have ing a sword in the background: ng & |scared them away. Only Senators there was no censorship of the| 5 press; or were Melvilla Broughton of North firing of the Supreme | 5 Court, or revolutionary intrigues ‘Carollua _xnd Dennis Chavez of {New Mexico. (The latter got a free in neighboring countries. % P’l‘ly:mdong“ e atter |EFID fo Argentina at Peron’s ex- ; » pense.) Gen. Wallace Graham. having led about the last democrat- |p, e 4 . e wLe A jnum]una doctor who got caught 3 X " ispeculating, was there, but Mrs. bassadord E:,‘:” m:r:;:ldr“:d“‘m?" |Kenneth Royall, who, an Argentine ;”“ ;‘" m:t Ch“' h": t"’ f:'[alde told me, had promised to Anericen e had to retlre.joome packed out. The Argentine people are among , e &L i ’ the most charming and gracious to | ou may describe this medal, be found any place, and the mem- |General Vaughan told a reporter, bers of the Argentine Embassy staff | 25 Pestowed by special dispensa- today—even under Peron—doubt- ton from Drew. less are equally so. 1 “I stood in a group surrounding However, that is not the pfiim_,Vaughan and listened to him rail The point is that Argentina has be- 1§;buut you. Then there were some come the most undemocratic nation |Btroductions and I introduced my- in the Western Hemisphere, ;\ndlse"'_ Mrs. Vaughan, eyeing me s influence—which is cunsider-[‘(“‘,‘cf‘?mo‘,m]y' asked: able —is anti-American 'conol')unl e ark for Drew Poasy ! “I said I did, and Vaughan look- U.S. VS. ARGENTINA led sheepish. He stalked off, leay- In other words, while President Ing me to talk to his admiring ' Peron is wooing Mr. Truman's fans who had been agreeing with Military Aide with a everytiing he said about you. They high decor- ation, he is simultanecusly trying mmediately changed their tur to undermine all the things the and started complimenting you United States stands for in Pan- Note—General Vaughan's Argen- America. |tine decoration must be approved | Mr. Truman, for instance, hes 'by the Senate if he is to keep it always been a great champion of It will be interesting to see what civil right. He does not go in Senators vote against it. Senator for the indiscriminate arrest of Ed Johnson, of Colorado, Democrat, his political critics. He has also is the only one who has raised made a great many speeches ©n eyebrow so far. | championing the democratic iree- SINGING CO! Congressman Norris Cotton, New Hampshire Republican, injected a new note the other day into the debate over repealing the margarine tax. He sang. In the middle of a discussion in Rl doms, and has spent many billions | SMAN of the taxpayers' money trying to bolster the discouraged democra- cies of Europe. Yet simultaneously a whole row of democracies have fallen before military dictatorships right in our own Pan-American show window. the House cloakroom, Cotton boum- And when the military dictator- ed out in song to the tune of ships have knocked out the demo- “Maryland, My Maiyland.” cracies, it is almost always be- “Gone the day when cow is queen,” sang the gentleman from New Hampshire. “Margarine, my margarine,” cause they have been inspirea or recretly encouraged by Peron—the man who uow makes it appear that a pause in tribute at an: | one through his ceremony in honor | do | reminder of its passing. “Do you always know what to do with your Ta . 52" asks an authority on etiquette. Well, no, but . ght. farmer grew a carload of turnips the advancing tide, finds itself without a from 10 cents worth of seed.” It was very careless TRINITY GUILD Annual Valentine Tea, Sat., Feb. 12, from 2 to 5 p.m. Undercroft of the Church. Everybody wel- 16 3t | come. INVITATION TO BID The Alaska Department of Health, Juneau, Alaska, announces the In- vitation to Bid for printing 5000 copies of an 80 page pamnhlet. In- terested bidders may call at Room 103, Territorial Building, Juneau, Alaska, for bid forms and speclfica’- tions. Sealed bids will be received at the above address until 11:00 A. M. February 26, 1949. First publicatnon, Feb. 11, 1949. Last publication, Feb. 25, 1949. to allow Territorial travel outside the Passed 21-3. Committee Substitute for | H. B. 28 | officials to House Jast we have learned to quit drawing to them joint Resolution No. 2, to appro- | priate $111,664, or so much thereof as shall be necessary, for payment of salaries to persons employed by the Senate and House and for other expenses incident to the 19th se n of the Legislature, Pass- ied 24-0. H.B 41, to appropriate $8,000 to pay U. 8. Commi ners for re- cording vital statistics. Passed 22- 0, 2 ahsent. i HJM. 7, praying that sales post exchanzes and commissarics be limited to military and other government personnel. assed 22- 1, 1 absent. Committee Substitute for H.B. 17, {to amend the law relating to li- censcs for slot machines. Passed 20-4. HB. 39, to dmend the law relat- ing to gaming devices. Pefssed 24-0. - -ee trade-in on your old storage | battery at Madsens Cycle and ! Fishing Supply. 13 tf . : Crossword Pu | R SR s E { ACROSS 30 Itaian A ' L Chum physicist S| & New Zeauna 3% native H R 9. Bwine 12. Literary 3 1 e fragments 3 d al 13 13 Mistake 10 hreatened s 3 3 heep :; ;"’"“ letter (g Australian bird 4 . Devise 4 1 17, Official 51 R ;! edicts 53, Charact 19. Unintentional 55 Feminine aperture ick Y ig :V"Im 56 25“':‘:’“:“"“ : Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle c 58 Central state: 2 23. Surrounded ADbr RowN 5. Thing with sonie. 59 Roman eltadol 1 Bucket o ra thing sulid 60 Chinese civet 2 English queen | Dissolute 26 Exclamation 61. Olden times: 3 Molten rock 3 e ans 20 High mountain poetic 1. Employees Sy II%HI-I A ndadnd// wi of BH.JRE FF T F L] ] P A AT [ ] SN Piece out Zeal 21 Knock ... 24. Mother-of- ar) fice Ancient wine vessel Masculine ickname musical . Metrical feet . South Ameri- Sandarac tr, Taille: i Nohleman Spoken Tear . Goddess of healing . Ibsen charucter . Plural endine TheB.M ; Safety . COMMERCIAL Oldest Bank in Alaska | 1891—8ver Half a Century of Banking—1949 Behrends Bank Derosit Boxes for Rewd SAVINGS in PIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA i~ - 20 YEARS A0 8% ssirine FEBRUARY 11, 1929 Harry Lucas, proprietor of the Juneau Motor Company and a stock- of the Juncau Cold Storage Company, returned from three Outside. He prophesied “a great year” for the Alaska fishing wdustry, reporting that markets in the States were ‘“‘crying for fish.” e said extremely cold weather had paralyzed business in Seattle. He cturned on the Alameda. older 1 i 1. P. Taylor, wife and two children, returned on the Alameda after {n extended trip to the East. Mrs. Peter Carlson and daughter, Winni- I red, also arrived on the Alameda. i i i Grace E. McCartney of the American Beauty Shop, returned from a l rip to the States. » ' V Albert Wile, Albert Brown and Richard Wakelin, brokers, were imong Juneau arrivals from the south. 4 I’ After completing a three-week trip between Ketchikan and Sitkm, !Land Examiner Jack Thayer, U. S. Forest Service, arrived for a week vin Juneau before returning to his headquarters in Ketchikan. He was | wccompanied on his trip by Rangers Charles G. Burdick of the Sitka 'district. and W. H. Chipperfield of the Craig district. Newly registered at the Zynda Hotel were Joe Hill, Lynn Canal; |S. J. Woofter, Nome; John Hanson, Ketchikan; Mr. and Mrs. C. F. { Cooke, Vancouver; J. E. Boyle, Seattle, and Helen Albrecht. : The Rev. Charles E. Leahy, S. J., was the guest of the Rev. | Gabriel Menanger, S. J., while in Juneau to start a series of lectures Iin Alaskan towns. He was chaplain of Loyola University, near Los i i Angeles. The Emma, skippered by her owner, Capt. Tom Ness, had arrived to join the fleet for the halibut season about to open. The Emma was a schooner type ship built in Tacoma in 1927. | Mrs. W. H. Parker and infant left for Seattle to await the arrival lof the C. G. cutter Unalga on wh}ch Mr. Parker was gunnery officer. }' PV ot ] Gilbert Moe, seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Moe, was operated on for appendicitis at St. Ann’s Hospital. Like G. Sedaloff, 1 i Juneau, and Jim Paul of Angoon, who had similar operations, the boy | was doing nicely. ——— L) Weather: High, 35; low, 33; cloudy. | Daily Lessons in English %. 1. corbon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “The child’s mother said that he may go with you.” Say, “SAYS that he MAY go,” or, “SAID that he MIGHT go.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Dishevel. Pronounce di-shev-el (not dis-hev-el) I as in IT, both E's as in SET, accent second syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: All right (two words); never ALRIGHT. SYNONYMS: Haughty, proud, disdainful, arrogant, contemptuous, supercilious. ! WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us merease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word : AMANUENSIS; cne employed to write what another dictates; a sec- ‘retary. “Mary was her uncle's amanuensis throughout his journalistic career.” by ROBERTA LEE MODERN ETIQUETTE Q. When a person is making an introduction, should he add a word or two of comment? A. Yes; if the comment he makes will enable the two persons to begin a friendly conversation, he should not miss the opportunity to do so. : | Q. What should one do if he gets food in his mouth that is too hot’ | to swallow? . H A. Get the food down somehow, and then take a swallow of water. Never, under any circumstances, take water while you have food in | your mouth. 8 Q. Should a note or letter of congratulation be sent upon recnlvmgl |an announcement of a birth. | ! A, Yes, and promptly. Sometimes a little gift for the baby Cnn‘ Itake the place of this note. I 1 LOOK and LEARN ¥ ¢ compon 1. What city was the first capital of the United States, and what city was the second? 2. What famous astronomer first used the telescope to observe the heavens? , 3. What U. S. President coined the phrase, “the strenucus life"? 4. Which is the oldest musical wind instrument? ‘What bird was held sacred by the ancient Egyptians? ANSWERS: 1. New York, from 1785 to 1790, and Philadelphia, from 1790 to 1800. Galileo (1564-1642). 3. Theodore Roosevelt. 4. The flute. 5. The ibis. ELLIS AIR LINES BAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Pelersharg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg. Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERYATIONS PHONE 612- M. L. MacSPADDEN as a paid-up subseriber 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 TRESPASSER" Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre PHONE 14—THE BOYAL BLUE CAB CO. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! FRIDAY, FEBRUARY!'L1, 1949' | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 ND and FOURTH Monday of each month 9 in Scottish Rite Temple ¢ begining at 7:30 p. m. ¥ 3 {GLENN O. ABRAHAM, \?y { Worshipful Master; h |JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. SENATE MEASURES —_— 18TH DAY, FEB. 10 (Measures Introduced) SJ.M. 11, by Senator Jones, nemorializing the Secretary of War, Chief of Army Engineers, Al- ska Road Commission and others, raying tiav an investigation be nade as to the feasibility of cut- ing a channel through the bar at he mouth of the Unalakleet River, nd that the Alaska Road Com- nission investigate the possibility if construction of a tram or road: rom Unalakleet to Kaltag. To | ransportation Committee. { (Mezsures Passed) SJ.M. 10, memorializing resident, Congress and numerous ther departments and agcncles,l raying that Alaskan firms, trades- nen and laberers be given the op- ortunity for fullest participation 1 all government construction pro- § ects in the Territory. Passed 16 o0 S.J.M. 8 memorializing the Sec- % B/F.0.ELK Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come. JOSEPH H. SADLIER, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. - Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday the || Governor—ARNOLD HILDRE l Bert’s Food Center Grocery Phones 104—1"5 Meat Phones 39539 etary of the Interior, Congress c 3 and Territorial Department of b .I.O.EIB_A‘A:.P fealth, praying that a study be | S s made with the view of establishing a suitable institution in Alaska for Alaska’s insane. Passed 16-0. S.B. 16, amending the law per- aining to liens for work or labor done or materials furnished, Pass- ed 16-0. H.B. 15, to amend the law per- taining to admission to practice aw in the Territory. Passed 16-0. H. B. 20, amending the law re- lating to the Alaska Housing Au- thority. Passed 16-0. . H.B. 21, amending the law relat- ! ing to jury service. Passed 16-0.1 - - "The Rexall Stors’ Your Rellabie Pharmacist BUTLER-MAURO i DRUG CO. Alaska Music Sapply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pignos--Madcal instraments and Sopplies Phone 206 Second and Seward ARCHIE B. BETTS Public Accountant Auditor Simpson J3ldg. Americans own 75 per cent of the world’s automobiles. SR GOODIE SALE BP.WC, Feb. 12th at Sears Order Office. 16 2t Tax Counses Phone 757 GEJRGE BROS. Widest Selection of ¢ LIQUORS PHONE 29¢ *‘Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists PHONY, 311 The Erwin Feed Ce. Office in Case Lot Grocery FHONE 784 HAY, GRAIN, COAR and STORAGE ° Call EXPERIENCED MEN ‘ Alaska JANTTORIAL Service FRED FOLETTE Wall Paper Tdeal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. We Juneau’s Finest Liquor Store BAVARD'S Phone 689 The Alaskan Reie} Newly Renovated Reems at Reasenable Rates FHONE BINGLE © PHONE 568 Phone 247 e 77 ||| Thomas Hardware Co. E PAINTS — OILS 3 WE i Builders’ and Shelf STEVENS b 224 LADIES'—MISSES’ Az READY-TO-WEAR Remington Typewriters Seward Street Near Third SOLD and SERVICED by The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franglin Ste PHONE 138 1. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street Card Beverage Co. #holesale 805 10th S MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM » daily habit—ask for i by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. p BN LRI 0 T Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCER Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 Ameriran Meat - Phone 38 PHONE 216—-DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS er SODA POP Casler’s Men's Wear PFormerly SABIN'S Bietren and Mallery Hats' Arrew Bhirts ané Underwess Allen Edmonds Shoes Skveay Lagrase BOTANY "m" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more frecdom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry RB. W. COWLING COMPANY DR. ROBERT SIMPSON OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined—Gilasses Flited SIMPSON BUILDING Phone 266 for Appointments — ————————— H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man SANITARY MEAT VOR BETTER MEATS LEVI'S OVERALLS 13-'—PHONES- A8 * for Boys Pree Delivery ; ; o ! Secretary— ’ WALTER R. HERMANSEN

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