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PAGE FOUR Published evers evening except Sunday by the EMP'RE PRINTING COMPANY | Second ®1d Main Streets, June EELEN TROY MONSEN “ - DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - ELMER A FRIEND e - 4 ALPRED ZENGER - - - - Daily Aldska Empiré”! Marx. . The. néw. commission has & Sl We hope tha '3 Vice-President Managing Editor Business Manager Prestdent | indicate the Republican Party | respect Senator Vandenberg's publ givings are disconcerting. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA | TUESDAY,; JUNE 7, 1949 eruption’ b\ vitihiFdtion Yintibch fes I petty clearly that Mr. Hickenlooper's ‘support for the lip service. blast does not heen largely t Mr. Hickenlooper's ly expressed mis- ! 1t thing is not The imports tion, though in this ! DOUBLE LIFE 1S REVEALED;WOMAN ISA.W.0.L MAN fro;'n THE EMPIRE 20 YEARS AGO JUNE 17, 1929 The first joint installation had been held by Douglas Aerie 117, F. O. HOUNT FUNEAL LODGE N 9: 100 SECOND and FOURTH vlonday of each month n Scottish Rite Temple regining at 7:30 p. m. FLENN O. ABRAHAM, Worshipful Master; 'AMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. o s “ . Ll Entered In the Post Office in Juncau as Second Class Matter. the man—Mr. Lilienthal is well able to defend himself JUNE 7 . o |E. and the Ladies' Auxiliary. Aerie officers instailed were William Ott, | AR ODT . Rk e SCRIPTION RATES: i Anger 10 sub 6 A - g Selivered by carrier 1o Jamean and Dousias for §1.50 per menth; | —DU the principle. For the danger in such blind | o © | Arne Shudshift, Alex Gair, Guy L. Smith, Robert Fraser, Mathew Laugh- | _m»_ Tne u. S. Airforce today ey el g g attacks is that they play into the hands of the cabal o Jack O'Connor ® ' lin, James Manning and R. A. Schmidt. Installing officers were Sam |formally accused Donna Delbert, the % B P 0 ELKS . postage paid. e fol ; " . | lin, s s 4 .U ome 2 e ot % montns. n advance, $7.50; itching to clamp tight military control on atomic |e Sue Low * | Devon and Charles Sey. Devon’and Mrs. A. J. Balog installed these | cutest music hall fire-cater In| @ . 1 advance, $1.50. ; is : rs. T. M. i TRt ting e N eoutcs = fhvor 1t they will peompely sonsty | STIETEY, 5N DPOins -of. Snety M. Lilienthal is no more | e M‘;c]": -r‘gegg“_"" ® | auxiliary officers: Mrs. Mary Feusi, Mrs, Gertrude Laughlin, Miss | Britain, of leading a double life. 8::“ \er‘xfifin Wednesday at e Business Office of any fatlure or irregularity in the delivers personally responsible for the suspected loss of uranium e (;n tehx ® | Elizabeth Feusi, Mrs. Anna Gair, Mrs. Jetta Gray, Mrs. Katherine Balog,| The Airforce asserted that Don- oon;a . Mo g bryoch;m wel- W thetr papers. ; responsible for the Nporieaid ¥ i ;. M na, with her hair cut off, is Private .- DEWE AKER, i . News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. than the President is personally responsible fc Mrs. Alice Sey, Mrs. Isabelle Cashen and Mrs. Esther Goss, , . Telephones AWBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS theft of.e Government vehiclé: | Ben Goldberg Ll s ¢ Delbert Hill of Philadelphia, a de-| FExalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, 7 A bers ‘of | ® Mrs. George Cain . : 753 2 - serter since 1945. Secretary. The Assoctated Press {s exclusively entitled to the use for Mr. Lilienthal is merely one of five members 0l H F. Palmer ) To go over the program with the Navy's air mappers, B. F. Heintzle- 2 sepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- .. a¢nnis Fnergy Commission who preside over a . F, Pal ° e # > The Provost Marshal of the Air- wise cred. .4 in this paper and sizo the local news published ' t Energy ho pres o 0676 #v ® 6. 8% & 8| man, Asistant District Forester, left for Petersburg. force base here ordered Hill fo| ______ Rarein vast enterprise of many employees. If there was care- | L i W i h. bef — - — i £ & 5 TR . y ‘tr al on a desertion charge ore [ BLACKWELL?! NATIONAL BEPRESENTATIVES — Alasks Newspapers, 1411 | lessness in the handling of uranium, it may be blamed N | Their third child, a son, was born June 6 to Mr. and Mrs. W. F.| o general court martial Friday S Pouith Avenue Bldz., Besttls, Wash __,on the commission only in the sense that a supervisor Anderson of Douglas, in the home of Mrs. Herman Weiss, Mrs. Anderson’s | morning. CABINET SHOP is responsible for the acts of his subordinates. More- mother. The fantastic masquerade came 17 Main St. Phone 772 l over, any scientist that Mr. Lilienth remote connection Dr. Ian G THE AEC INVESTIGA For nearly two weeks readers through Associated Press dispatches, have been told daily of the investigation of the Atomic Energy Com- mission, charges brought by Senator enlooper, Republican of Iowa, especially against Chair- man David Lilienthal. We up here in Alaska, removed from the scene, depend on the dispat this probe, etc, and along this line tell-tale taken from an editorial in Post, that gives a new slant: Senator Hickenlooper has seized He lists the pre ATION of The Empire, 'methods, including The first step towal is to get the snor she or he snores. But here, too, Bourke B. Hick- ches to tell about is the followinz the Washington B0 the basic fact o upen the recent b s difficulties of the Atomic Energy Commission as a political bludgeon with which to ren Chairman David E. Lilienthal. In Lilienthal's resignation and belaboring him for “in- Mr. Hickenloover is merely credible mismanagemen restating an old grudge. The Iowa Senator has never liked Lilienthal; he has regarded him as a New Dealer only slightly more respectable than The Washingion Merry-Ge-Round ‘ By DREW PEARSON (Continued from Page 1D the curious caller, “but God will be there.” SOCIAL DIPLOMACY | The full inside story has not yet been written of how Andrei Grom-, yko, first deputy Foreign Minister'they seek from Uncle Sam, they |desk clerk. of the US.S laid the groundwork for the Paris Big Four conference. It is a story which involves such | names as Nelson Rockefeller, War- ren Austin, and especially Mrs. Aus- | tin and Mrs. Gromyko. | During the past year, Gromyko has quietly broken down the social | wall which normally keeps So\'le[; diplomats from contact with the world they live in. He has ac- cepted frequent dinner invitations from U. S. delegate Warren Aus- tin, at which young Rockefeller and ! other broad-minded busini‘ssxnen‘! were present. Actually, there was not hush-hush discussion at these din-| ners. ©One informant describes them as g “painfully social.”’ But they broke the ice between key individuals of East and West— thanks in part to the cordial feeling that grew up between Mrs. Austin and Mrs. Gromyko, The- Austin dinners were recipro- cated by the Gromykos, at their 680 Park Avenue residence. These social icebreakers began, much questions. even before Gromyko went back tui REVAMPING CZECH COM- Russia last year, and those who MUNISM knew his movements in that period| qp0 puppet government of say he went not only to Moscow but to Sochi in the Crimea, where he was a personal guest of Premier ! Stalin Stalin, apparently impressed with | Gromyko's report, asked him to make a report direct to the Polit- buro. This Gromyko did, stating that there was a genuine desire for an East-West understanding in the U. 8., and no desire for war. This is the dinner-table back- ground—in which the ladies played no small part—which helped soften the Soviet Foreign Office and op- ened the way for lifting the Berlin blockade, BIG SHIPPING LOBBY While Congress is supposed to be cracking down on lobbyists, the paid representatives of the big ship- owners are violating an early lobby- ing act that became the forerunner of the present lobbying law. This first Congressional attempt to put the finger on lobbyists has ‘ nen-Communists. Another thing wire-tappers go abs is batted back and ew his feud with calling for Mr. ingless from a security standpoint. stalking horse, scientific fellowships, it should be clear will testify that the loss is mean- As to the other al and his colleagues with them. had only a WAR ON THE SNORE Robin of London challenges medical | science to tackle the problem of snoring. Since the | ytures a ‘Iflmx]y is the root of western culture, and since snor- |also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 ing menaces the family, Dr. Robin is dealing with a matter of deep import. esent methods of dealing with snor- ing—amputation of the uvula, removal of obstruc- tions in the throat, etc. And he speculates on new psychotherapy. | But Dr. Robin is missing the obvious first step. rd an effective treatment of snoring er, wife or husband, to admit that OF WEATHER ALASKA PTS. conditions and lem]:ber-i various Alaska polnts.l w |a. m., 120th Meridian Time, and | released by the Weather Bureau, | Juneau follow: | Anchorage 45—Cloudy | Barrow 30—Cloudy | | Bethel 36—Cloudy Cordova 34—Partly Cloudy | Dawson 45—Partly Cloudy | | Edmonton 52—Cloudy | Fairbanks 48—Partly Cloudy | Haines ; ..41—Rain | | Havre 57—Partly Cloudy | , science offers hope. Cinemato- graphic and sound-recording devices, using infra-red | light, could take a night's record of a spouse. And | ould thus be established bcynnd; we wonder about is how telephone | out translating the double-talk that | forth between two politicians. | | Now that a movie camera has been made that | takes a million pi be possible to obta man dodging an iss whose ideas are n those of Karl o gl e today called for bids on the surfac- e artl 30«1’-‘og} ing job of 4.917 miles of road on; I McGrath 42—Partly ClOudy‘ WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “She saw me previous to|the Mitkof Highway near Peters- | | Nome 31—Partly Cloudy | ny going.” Say, “She saw me PREVIOUSLY to my going.” | burg. ! Norihgmyy. 39—Partly Cloudy | ° oprEN MISPRONOUNCED: Schism (separation). Pronounce sizm,| Bids will be opened in the Ju- :if;i;g:g ;s_,;g;f;flgiofigg I as in SIT. {neau headquarters office June 20. lp,“‘“. George 39—Clear OFTEN MISSPELLED: Fictitious; TIOUS. Malicious; CIOUS. { Seattle 51—Partly Cloudy? SYNONYMS: Maneuver (noun), scheme, artifice, ruse, strategem. | We pay Seattle vrices d'"‘i:ll‘p Whitehorse 34—Partly Cloudy| ~ WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us ';“’~l Madsen Cycle an iml:: Yakutat 40—Fartly Cloudy | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | SUPPIY | ctures a minute, perhaps it would | in a pictorial record of a Congress- ue. but haven't bothered to register un- | der the 1936 law, are: L. R. Sah- | ford, also a former Martime Com- mission employee, but now execu-| tive vice president, Shipbuilders' Council of America; Frazer Bailey, president, National Federation of!| American Shippin, George Mor- | | gan, president, Association of Amer- 1 Saturday after completing his first ican Ship Owners; Wilbur E. Dow, | Jr., president, American Tramp | Shipowners Institute; and Chester | Thompson, president, American| Waterways Operators, Inc | As an example ot the handout: are asking Congress for a dual standard of depreciation on their ships. For the purpose of paying taxes, they want the government to | grant an accelerated, 15 per cem‘ depreciation, which would complete- | ly depreciate their vessels in less | than seven years. On the cther hand, the shipping | comgpanies demand that the govern- | ment figure a 20-year depreciation | in paying for private ships it takes ! over in case of war. ! That’s the kind of lcbbying the shipping companies’ unregistered lobblists are doing on Capitol Hill. Note—To find out whether the lobbyists were registered, this col- umn called Maritime Commissioner Joe Carson. questions, demanded to know who | had tipped off Pearson. At one | point, he blurted: “I suppose you are recording my conversation.” Assured that he was not talking into a dictaphone, he still held | back. Though the information is a matter of public record, Carson finally refused to answer any more | Czechoslovakia is doing an nhoul-i face and will take in a number of Also, Czechoslo-' vakia wants aid under the Marshall Plan. However, don't be fooled by this. Actually, the proposed Czech | changes are tied up to the sllun—! ition in Greece . . . Russia’s An- | drei Gromyko propesed at the Uni- | | ted Nations that the Greek govern- { { ment broaden its base and hold free | elections. To which Dean Rusk of | the State Department and Hector | McNeil of the British Foreign Office replied in effect: “How do | Greece when you have abolished all | democracy and free elections in' Czechoslovakia?” To avoid em- barrassment, the Kremlin has now | decided to take a small portion’ of its heel off the neck of the Czech people. He squirmed at the| . you dare talk about demeccracy in| ° KETH WEISS BACK | AFTER ONE YEARAT | WASH. STATE COLLEGE Keith Weiss returned to Juneau year at Washington State College. A major in hotel administration, Keith is putting his school work | to practical use by working at the Baranof Hotel this summer, where his mother, Mrs. Lorena Weiss is! Like most.of the hotel adminis- tration students at WSC, Keith hopes to finish his course at Cor-| nell, but because of limited regis-, trations he said that it was doubt- ful that any of the Washington, State applicants would be Cornell graduates. “WSC is a fine school, but the| trees and mountains and water in Juneau look pretty good,” said Keith, voicing his pride in Juneau. e e o o 0 0 o ¢ ‘. . ° TIDE TABLE ° . . — . JUNE 8 . ® Low tide, 5:5¢ am., -18 ft. e| High tide, 12:16 p.m., 148 ft. ® Low tide, 17:54 am, 24 ft. e . . L I R I Y ) ! NOTICE 1 After' June 10, no telephone rentals for the month of June will be accepted at a discount. All remittances must bear postmark of | not late than discount date. Please be prompt. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS TELEPHONE CO. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS . Car 1. Weary Hewing tool 4. Dull finish 89. Hindu weigh 40. Federal trict: abbi 18. Decoration 18, Husk of a frult . Roman house- hold gods. Made a suce 20. Children 21. Newly mar- 4. ried woman ion of 23 Eatsparingly it 25. Addition to sounds letters ab Wise man 21. Corded fabric b4, Town in 8 Pennsyl- vania 30 Large turnips DOWN 3. Vessel for 32 Pronoun 1. Nourished holding ery small medicines 3. 59, Type measures 2. Anclent chalice 4. Mother Now is the tane to put your tur | coats in storage. We have the omyl cold fur vault in Juneau. Comz i | been on the books since the Mer- |to our office. Chas. Goldstein | chant Marine scandal of 1936, and |and Co 9 1 requires lobbyists to register witn | e ‘ the Maritime Commission before | CALL FOR BIDS trying to influence shipping legisla- | |ORDER POLICE ACTION —adv. | Publication date, June 7, 1949. | —_— 2 | ... 43—Rain 45—Partly Cloudy | Juneau Airport Annette Island ON DELINQUENT TAXES Enforcement of a city statute | enabling Councilmen to “‘get tough” with delinquent taxpayers was | | agreed on at a City Council meet-! ing last night. \ All delinquent personal property taxpayers are notified by the Coun-‘ cil that direct action by the Police | Department for tax collection will of the family may write it be ordered today. Tatooing was once common among primitive peoples in various parts of the world. SCHWINN BIKES at MADSE. l ANNOUNCEMENT FOR BIDS ‘ Sealed bids will be received at the office of the City Clerk of Juneau,J Alaska, until 8:00 p.m. June 17, 1949 | {for the furnishing of Workmen's | Compensation and Employers Lia- | bility Insurance for the period from | June 21, 1949 to June 21, 1950 and | ATV ERE Phone 247 will then and there be publicly °-"',phi1:;1e1’:}),siangms' New York, Chicago, New Orleans, Detroit, and || - R — ened and read. Bids recei % e ! e fon oponimg will mot| 2. To the heart; arteries carry fi from the heart, STEVENS® be considered. i 3. New Hampshire. Each bid is to be submitted as| 4. Vinegar. | LADIES’ —MISSES’ 1one lump-sum based on classifica- 5. Cain. READY-TO-WEAR tions, estimated annual salaries and wages of City Employees, which in- | formation can be obtained at the | office of the City Clerk. | The City of Juneau reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive infomalities. ! No biddgr may withdraw his bid | after the hour set for opening | thereof, nor before award of the‘ contract unless said award is de- layed for a period exceeding 30 days. L C. L. POPEJOY, City Clerk. Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle Minute particle . Long abusive speech Weight Related through the mother 8. Support Plots 11. East Indian gunny cloth . Require Music ' Daily Lessons in English % 1. corbon. !ANTEDATE; to date as of a time prior to that of execution. “The at- gllOOK and LEARN e N {to an end on April' 7, at New- || Howard H. Lerch, secretary-treasurer of the Admiralty Coal Mining | castle. Company, left for Seattle, accompanied by Mrs. Lerch. . Based on the report of Amos Slater, Lerch expected to return July 1 with recom- | mendations for one of three propositions. closed source, British police picked up the 36-year-old Hill at a thea- trical hoarding house where he stayed between turns on the stage. Hill was hefty but fetching in women'’s clothing, a shoulder-length hair-do and plucked eyebrows. A girl assistant in the fire-eating act | ' said she had been with him for| months without suspecting the truth. “Donna Delbert, Demon Fire Eat- er,” was Hill's billing. i The Airforce cropped “Donna’s” | hair to GI length, outfitted him| with a set of fatigues and put him | {in the prisoners’ stockade to grow 8 new set of eyebrows while they| investigated the case. | Mrs. J. Hayes entered St. Ann's Hospital for medical treatment. Three new members — W. E. Hendrickson, Roy Carrigan and Roy Thomas — were elected to the Juneau Volunteer Fire Department. They were to fill the vacancies left by the resignations of L. Kean, Don 8. Haley and Selim Jackson. The department voted to name a represen- tative to the local Boy Scout Council, electing Z. M. Bradford. The fire department accepted the invitation from the Elks Lodge to participate | in Flag Day ceremonies June 14. | | Dr. M. N. Garhart, head of the Garhart Laboratories in Seattle, sailed after a hunting trip on Admiralty Island. Weather: High, 74; low, 54; cloudy. The formal charge today follcwed. | ADVERTISE ¥OR BiDS The Public Roads Administration | torneys decided that the deed was antedates MODERN ETIQUETTE ¥operra LEE _.Q. What is the proper way to eat an apple when at the table? # "iA. Cut the apple into quarters, then peel it. The pieces should be | conveyed to the mouth with the fingers. Q. Who should write the note of thanks when an invalid receives a gift? : A. If well enough, the invalid should do so. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 399 “Say It With Flowers” but “<AY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists PHONE 311 {{ The Erwin Feed Ce. Office In Case Lot Grocery | fHONE 7 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE Otherwise, any member Q. When is the wedding reception designated as a breakfast? A. When the marriage is performed at 12 o'clock or earlier. by A. C. GORDON 1. What are the six largest cities in area in the United States? | 2. Do veins carry blood to the heart, from the heart, or both? 3. In what State is “The Geat Stone Face” of Hawthorne's tales | situated? 4 4. What is the everyday name for diluted acetic acid? 5. What Biblical character said, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” Call EXPERIENCED MEN Alaska JANITORIAL Service FRED FOLETTE Seward Street Wear Third EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and PFranklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS The Charles W. Carter | Card Boniago’ Co. Oldest Bank in Alaska {J; Tolsmle; (e S 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1949 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAI SAVINGS PHONE 216—DAY o NIGHT for MIXERS er SODA POP Casler's Men's Wear Pormerly SABIN'S Stetsen and Mallery Haw. | srrow Ghirts and Underwear ADlen Edmends Shee Skyway Laggage BOTANY lmll CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing ' Complete Outfitter for Men S.W.SMITH v as a paid-up subscriver lomnAqéw EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE &. V. COWLING Acting on a tip from an undis- ||| WALTER R. HERMANSEN Bids will be received until Friday, | High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Store Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor—JOHN LADELY Secretary— Beri’s Food Center Grocery Phones 104—10% Meat Phones 39—539 Deliveries—10:15 A. M. 2:15 — 4:00 P. M ""The Rexall Store’ Your chanh. Pharmacists SUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Sapply 4rthur M. Uggen, Manager Manes -Masical Instraments and Supplies ~loue &5 Second and Sewaro FOR . Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shoy Phone 549 Pred W Wen Juneau’s Finest Liquor Store BAVARD'S Phone 689 The Alaskan Bere: Newly Renevated Loomn ¢ Reasenable Rate FHONE SINGLE « PHONE 658 Thomas Hardware (o PAINTS — OILS Baflders’ and Shels HARDWARE Remin, Typewriters SOLD mnunweln [ J. B. Burford & Ce. “Our Doersicp Is Worn by Satistied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorised Dealers) GREASES — GAS — On Junean Motor Co. Foot of Main Strees MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CRE -mwfilwfl Juneau Dairies, Inc. — Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Warine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Homo Liquer Btere—Tel 690 American Meat — Phene 38 ———— e T e—— To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry DRSS e DR. ROBERT SIMPSON eminine name Cubic meter Kind of cheese Abuse Assert as fact Not far Take out On the watch Dedge—Plymouth—Chi saler DeSete—Dedge Trucks tion on Capitol Hill |June 10th at 10:00 AM. for con- Theught this statute has never | struction of retaining walls on 9th been repealed, big shipping lobbyists |and Indian Streets and 9th and pay no attention to it. Even now |Dixon Streets. Plans and specifi- | a flock of lobbyists are clamoring |cations can be obtained at the City before Congress for new shipping | Engineer's office. Quantities in- | subsidies and, out of the entire lot, | velved are approximately 75 cubic only one has bothered to register yards of retaining wall and 125 and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "BIG CITY" Federal Tax-~12c--Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO—Phone 22 H. S. GRAVES SANITARY MEAT The Clothing Man i with the Martitime Commission. cubic yards of excavation. % . g and an w*wILL CALL FOR YOU and He is the Waterman @teamship | wi. MCNAMARA; ew " RETURN Y o i ¥OR BETTER MEATS g Company’s lobbyist, Don Geaslin. I ar m Engineer. l " s:'z'fi}fi,‘l' | R N%U 10 your hPme with oux g.m “ 3 s Ev‘r:"o XOE RALLS Other shipping representatives, | First publication, June 7, 1949, Poglish etter 1 WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May ot who have appeared before Congri 'Last publication, June 9, 1949. ¢