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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening except Sunday by the MPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and M Juneau, Alaska HELEN TROY MONSEN - DOROTHY TROY LINGO MER A. FRIEND 2ENGER - President | Vice-President Managing Editor Business Manager in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATE! ¥.livered by earrier in Juneau and Douglas for §1.50 per month; six months, 0; one vear, $15.00 at the following rates: ; six months, in advance, $7.50; ‘confer a favor if they will promptly notify any failure or irregularity in the delivery e ews Office, 602: Business Office, 874. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Press 1a sxclusively sntified Yo AB use for'| Wl news dispatches credited to it or 2ot ether- fed i this paper and lso the local news published | AL REPRESENTATIVES laska Newspapers, 1411 ! nue Bldg., Seattle, Wash, | reader on a newspaper?” | four-job roles, it is indecd fortunate they are getting | | more muscle and also sturdier foundations for the | | | future. THL cory IH',\I)ER An Empire subscriber has asked * ‘What is a copy Might just as well answer | | that question right here, so here it is The copy reader is the man who between the reporter or correspondent and you, the | o | reader; he weighs, evaluates and sorts the day's news, S strikes out the dubious, the trivial, rearranges l()mca]ly | | that which in his judgment, is worth your while as a ‘ f rmdcr, edits it into a concise, readable account—then writes for it the headline that summarizes the and simplifies your reading of i Justice, New Style (Cincinnati Enquirer) as the Attorney General says, that the His department has the It may be, Cnmmunms are on the run. |® le patiently sits|e story | o | r THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU, ALASKa . JULY 13 Mrs. Cleo Commers Mrs. B. L. Holbrook Mrs. Charles G. Warner Arnold Swanson Maurine McDounell Mirian McDounell Gladys Fisher Irene Martin Douglas Ferris 20 YEARS AGO & JULY 13, 1929 | Gov. George A. Parks left Washington, D. C., | via Denver for a brief visit at the family home. to the capital for conferences a month before, while California. from THE EMPIRE for Juneau, returning He had been called on a vacation in | { Enroute to Sitka to visit the Government experiment station and look over other Federal activities, Col. D. P. Quinlan, representative of resident Hoover on an Alaska survey, left on the Forest Service boat Tahn, Capt. Aiken. With him were Mrs. Quinian, Assistant District | Forester B. F. Heintzleman and Lt. Emerson C. Itschner, Secretary of ‘thr Alaska Road Commission. Couple Returns Satisfactory progress was reported on exploratory mining work on Taku River discovery held by Charles Goldstein, I. Goldstein, Dr. The vein had been traced [ | the Robert Simpson, M. V. Manville and others. | for 1,000 feet on the surface. | WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1949 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple JOHN GAFFNEY, SEATTLE INSURARCE EXECUTIVE, AND SON ARE HERE i n John Gaiiney, geaerar manager | Worshipful Master; of Frank Burns, Inc., Seattle 1n—‘JAMEs W. LEIVERS, 5ecretgry curance agents, and his son Patrick | - arrived in Juneau last night aboard the S.8. Baranof. A former Juneau resident, Mr | Gaffney is here on business with | his associate, Stan, Grummet of the | Juneau Insurance Agency. This is his first trip north rm 12-year-old Patrick Gaffney who 1\' locking forward to some fishing in between his father's business ap-| pointments. The Gaffneys, who are| ctaying at the Baranof, will be inl I Juneau for several day: | @BPOPLKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come. F. DEWEY BAKER, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 17 Main St. Phone 772 . High Quality Cabinet Work for Kome, Cffice cr Store SCHWIN'N BlKI:b at M/ | | \ UNITED STATES ! 7 B any of the 4 \ { figures, o he should Know. No grle wiil tmiss any cf A. E. Johnson of Douglas returned from the Sitka triangle trip on :DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | \ says, HEFTIER WOMEN Reports that American women are wearing !arger and gloves than before the war indicate in feminine vanity or an fincrease feminine muscle. Shoe and glove manufacturers women’s feet and hands have developed with ater use in wartime. The popularity of open- s, flats and sandals in recent years has given ore opportunity to spread. » women's increasingly active life, accelerated the war, has eliminated shoes that pinch, gloves bind. Nevertheless vanity still hangs on. Glove size shoes either a decrease say their toed fec by tht | munist e holders of Communist cards who, Mr. Clark have been fleeing the country in substantial num- | bers. Indeed, the department will have less trouble | with genuine Communists than with those individuals who are daily being denounced as Communists, Com- | ympathizers, fellow- travelers or any of the subsersive categories,, frequently without proof. The numerous spy and loyalty investigations of the last few years have given impetus to what may soon lead to a dangerous situation. Even now it would | seem to be an easy matter for anyone to denounce another individual to the FBI, the Department of Justice’s investigative branch, on the flimsiest grounds. ! When such denunciations, no matter what the source, can be admitted as evidence, as now seems possible, they place the victim in the position of being guilty and therefore of having to prove himself innocent, whereas the burden of proof should be on the accuser. The fundamental right of every American is to be regarded as innocent until proved guilty. Self-admitted perjurers and confessed couriers for foreign alien espionage rings may now make the most fan- ! mar acturers are cutting many enot The la hand is 6 sizes. wemen now to 6%, 5 tc and it is rumored that t lways in these sizes. this, William K. into ger 5% On top of of the Ar ing taller, gallantly adds, fu are making both American ind even better tion bi Sinc ger The Washington Merry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON Continued from Paye working. and the Kremlin Marshall it ald t Plan wis! was ¢ | for conciliatory things happenea few brief weeks be- inary talks in Ap- and the ference in June, ap- : first cracks of economic British busines American unemp. n ing two the to slump. = an policy snift- Vishinsky was polite The Paris confer- In Berlin, the 3 partly lifted. it looked as if the Russians the big break they had for—depression—had they probably figured : more sabre-rattling in Moscow, the more money spent ment in Washington, with more re- sultant industrial activity and busi- ness prosper Likewise the less milita activity behind the Iron curtain, the more chance of econo- mic doldums outside the Iron Curtain. But whatever the Russians figur- ed, this has been the result. And none have to do any figuring to know also that what Moscow has wanted most is world-wide de- pressior fter which she could go around up the remaining pieces list system. ed. m Paris, kut ence Elo: figured been looking arrived. Als CAUSES ©F CRISIS arlier column dealt with the causes of the British monetary cc. lapse—which also extends in var: ing degree to other West Europeax countries. Eriefly those causes ar eats, An which is induced, In by lack of labor efficiency, ded machinery and the loss tic colonies. There is also another important factor turn outn of of economic barriers When this writer with the Friendship Train, far- sighted Ttalian Foreign Minister Col Carlo Siorza remarked: - only salva is a United of Europe. We can nevi be economically self-supporting as long as we are cut up by national- istic bour ies. Moreover, we will never abolish war until we banish nationalism. “And ism by States banish national- elves. We can only do put the pressure on. can do it through the Marshall are the only people who set up a United States But you will have to be tough. Otherwise the Marshall Plan will be only a chapter — a pleasant chapter, but a passing one.” we won't can mal of Eurcpe MARSHALL PLA! Count Sforza was British proved that right. The the Marshali ize gloves full | tastic accusations and be listened to, apparently, with to be actually Ts, since women don't like to move ; average-size while before the war it was Streit, rican Association for Health, cation and Recreation, says American women are be- | “somewhat heftier and more muscular.” “also prettier and more 2zest- Better diet, living conditions and pk — in the sense of healthier. Jife is constantly demanding more and more of women, placing them in two-job and even three-'and calling of | on arma- | _failure of the Marshall Plan | to cope with Europe’s basic problem | was in Europe WEAK SPOT : shoe for he whole truth is after-dinner Vice-President Physical Edu- of life. cal educa- women and men “Even the you Congressmar. Of to be a pleasant pleasant for Eu- for the American | Plan passing rope, but taxpayer. Marshall Plan admin | have tried to get goods exchang ! between European countries; and | in a minor way they lnve succeed- ed. But they have not been tough. | They have broken d zeal barriers One reason is that cart before the horse. | | Marshall Plan before the Atlantic Pact. For is going chapter- not yn e we rve <he| We th the ! i [ instance, it is impossible to | | persuade France that she does not‘ { reed her own exclusive steel indus- | , and that Belgium could better | manufacture steel for her, as long!| 'as there is no pclitical alliance in Western Europe guaranteeing steel to France in case of war. | Now that Belgium and France | are alignea under the North "At- lantic Pact—or better still in some future United States of Eure then the need of each iittle coun- try to have its own industrial steel industry is not so vital. The same might be true of Italy’s Fiat automobiles. It European trade barriers and political boun- daries were broken down, one or | two auto facteries could supply all | Europe's needs. Because of boun- daries, the Fiat plant in Italy has only a skimpy, impoverished mar- | | ket; likewise the Renault auio| plant in France, the Austin in! England, and so on. Their mar- | kets, hemmed in by nationalist riers, in the eyes of a Detroit | manufacturer, aren’t worth sneez- ing at. i Yet each country is determined to keep up its motor production, partly because automobile plants | can be turned into tank and air- ane factories. With the North Atlantic Pact, this is less necessary. With a United States of Europe, would not be uecessary at all. } RSHALL PLAN RETARDED The Marshall Plan not only fail- ed to do more than nibble at this | | problem, it actually retarded badly needed reforms. | Italy, for instance, will never be anywhere near self-supporting un- jtil the great landed estates of South Italy are broken up and re- | | clamation projects created to pro- tect the land from drought. But when the De Gasperi gov-| ernment approached this, Marshall | Plan Administrator James Zeller- ! bach raised his hands in holy hor- | ror. The U. S. Congress, he said, wouldn't approve. Breaking up It-l aly’s big estates was socialism. The ! result might be, he warned, that| Ttaly’s Marshall Plan money would ke cut off Mr. Zellerbach's family are etfi- cient manufacturers of paper. But his ignorance about European re- censtruction enly substantiates Count Sforza's prediction that the | Marshall Plan would be only a chapter in Europe's struggle tor al sound economy—a pleasant chapter, {but a passing one. (Ed. Note—Another Drew Pear- son column on whether we face a creeping, world-wide depres- sion will 1ollow soon.) | | | { Somebody is always trying to take the Now a physician is busily experimenting with serums in an effort to find a cure for laziness. “A federal tax of $5 each should be imposed on speeches,” wouldn’t it be unconstitutional to tax something at 20 !nos Aarstad has made application to 1,000 per cent of i suggests a columnist But value? s, ng favor oid-age pens: says a course, the young realize that old | age 1s something that's liable to happen to anybody. o o o o c . e s 8 < ¢ © TIDE TABLE JULY 14 High tide, 4:03 a.m., 15.7 ft Low tide, 10:36 am., -0.7 ft. High tide, 16:58 p.m., 14.9 ft. Low tide, 22:56 pm., 23 ft. eececs e 2 ® e 0 0 r e 0 0 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT ZF THE INTERIOR | Bureau of Land Management District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. April 14, 1949. Notice for Publication. Notice is hereby given that Mabel | Hoopes Swanson has made applica- |tion for a homesite under the act of May 26, 1934 (43 Stat. 809) for A tract of land embraced in Plat of U. S. Survey No. 2434, situated on the south side of Glacier Highway | about 7 miles northwest of Juneau, | Alaska, Anchorage sSorfal 011407, Imuch sympathy, whereas those whom they have de- | nounced must clear their names and reputations. joy out ! After Marriage The marriage in New York City | of Mr. Jack Glover and Miss Tom: | Mannewitz was made known here | today with the return of the couple |aboard the Princess Norah. They | were married late in June, return- ing to Portland for a few weeks (Letore coming to Juneau. | Mr. Glover, who operates | Totem Art Studio here, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Glover | formerly of Juneau and now of Portland, Ore. Miss | who was employed by the Alaska |Iillun(“1(‘nl of Health prior to | leaving for the States earligr in the merly of New York City UNITED STATES ; DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska May 24, 1949 Notice is hereby given that Ten- | | [ fer a homesite under the Act of May 126, 1934 (48 Stat. 809), Anchorage | Serial 012679, for a tract of land | described as H.S. No. 591, East Craig | Group of Homesites, situated about 1, mile E. of Craig, Alaska, adjoin- ing Sur. No. 2327, and between the ‘Craig-Klawak Highway and ti:z 1Craig Truck Traii, Survey No. 2611, acres, | Alaska. ivex'scly any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claim in the district land office within | the period of publication or thirty | days thereafter, or they will be bar- red by the provisions Jf the sta- | tutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Manager. | First publication, June 29, 1949. Last publication, Aug. 24, 1949. UNITED STATES ! DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska May 24, 1949 26, 1934 (48 Staat. 809), Anchorage Serial 010995, for a tract of land Lot 6, Fritz Cove Group | descrived shore Auke Bay and-West Side Fritz Cove Highway adjoining unapproved containing 4.98 acres, latitude 58° 15\“‘95 No. 2634 and Survey No. 2546, 21’ 45” N. longituue 134° 33' W. and it is now in the files of the District ! Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned ' land should file their claim with the District Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, within the period of publi- {cation or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the Statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Manager. 1 First publication, May 18, 1949. Last publication, July 13, 1949. Plat of U. S. Survey No. 2670, con- taining 2.22 acres, and it is now in the files of the District Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- | versely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claim 1in the district land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by | the provisions of the statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Manager. First publication, July 6, 1949. Last publication, Aug. 31, 1949. rossword Puzzle ACROSS . Open a cask . Mexlcan corn meal much . Suitable 2. Scotch chemist Pertaining to punishment 1. Huge wave 5. Lower . Wicker stem . Facility Kind of moss 38. American Indian 30. Clear 40. Supervisors of publi- cations 6. Novel . On the side away from the “wind 51. Ascended Assurance of manner 55. Cover . Edge . Late: comb, form . Meadow . First sign of the zodiac . Firearm DOWN . Ventllates . Tools for en- larging openings . Reverence . Part of a play Not the same . Withdraw . Stow in a ship's hold Moderate . Alr 2 Open court Span of horses BERg Avmxigo/zm| Solution ot Yesterday's Puzzle 3. Favorites Copy Sloping bank of earth 8. Highest note of Guido's scale . Town in California Fruit 1. Browns . Pronoun . Flavor . Norwegian county . Having organa of hearing . Moving me-~ chanical part . Southern constellation . Spider's trap . Greek letter . Domestic fow] . Preceding night . Steep . Articles . Packing . Inhabitant of: suffix . Interior . One of the Cape Verde Islands . Higl . New York state canal . ftallan opera . Lengthy . Australian bird: vartant very black Feminine name . Footlike part . New England stat~: abbr, the | Mannewitz, | Plat of U. S.| containing 2.50 | 4 and it is now in the files of | i the District Land Office, Anchorage, | i Any and all persons claiming ad- | Notice is hereby given that Nadja | C. Trivlette has made application | for a homesite under the act of May | of Homesites, situated on the East | Bennett. A painting-up movement in Douglas started by Mayor Kilburn on ing were F. A. J. Gallwas, Joe Riedi and others. At the meeting of the Douglas Volunteer Fire Department, it was decided to sell the pavilion on Mayflower Island if possible.” Alex Russell "\\..As elected to the department. Brokers returning to Juneau on the Rogers from the triangle trip | | included J. F. Chamberlin, accompanied by Mrs. Chamberlin; E. F. Zuern | and Chester Johnson. L. M. Carrigan, merchindise broker, boarded the | Rogers for Ketchikan. Weather: High, 55; low, 53; cloudy. B ] Dally Lessons in English % 1. corbon —_____—_____._.—J WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: PER CENT is both singular and plural. | “Ten per cent WAS the profit.” “Ten per cent of the boys ARE em- | ployed.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Presentation. PREZ, and not PREEZ. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Liquefy; observe the E, and not LIQUIFY. SYNONYMS: Effort, endeavor, attempt, trial. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vosabulary bv mastering one word each day. Today's word BILINGUAL: recorded or expressed in two languages; speaking two languages. syllable). Prencuiice first syllable “It is a bilingual dictionary.” “It is a bilingual country.” MODERN ETIQUETTE Q. Wouldn't you consider it lack of good manners for two persons who meet, to stop in the middle of the sidewalk to talk? A, Yes; it is both inconsiderate and discourteous, and they should step aside so that they do not block the way for other pedestrians. Q. How long before the wedding should a gift be sent to the bride? A. Usually two weeks or. ten days before the date of the wedding, | so that the bride may have time to acknowledge it. | Q. What is the first thing one should do after being seated at the | dinner table? | A. Unfold the napkin and place it across the lap. | | LOOK and LEARN % ¢ corpon 1 by ROBERTA LEE l | | | 1. How old is the motion picture industry? | were killed by Indians? | 3. How many sides has the cell of a honeycomb? {5 | greatest proficiency? What is an ornithoper? ANSWERS: Motion pictures began as a new medium of expression in 1896. General George Armstrong Custer. Six. & At 28 years of age. A flying machine designed to fly by means of flapping wings. gre: LSRR RS el e .32 i | EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and Franklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS Juneau Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—I949 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS MRS. JENNY SOBERG as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASA 4 EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present thxs coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “LINDA, BE GOOD” Federal Tax—12c—Paid by the Theatre - Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phone 22 | and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and ! RETURN YOU to yeir home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE-—Your Name May Appear! | the Rogers, reporting a fine vacation which included a side trip to Lake . In New York City several of his houses had caught on, and among those who were paint- | Bureau of Land Management | District Land Office | Anchorage, Alaska | June 20, 1949 | Notice for Publication : Notice is hereby given that Valeri | i Vincent Trambitas has made appli- cation for a homesite under the Act of May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) An- chorage Serial No. 011307, for a tract of land embraced in plat ot U. S. Survey No. 2634 situated on | the East Shore Auke Bay and Wcs! | Side Fritz Cove Highway approxi- mwlelv 127 miles Northwesterly from Juneau, Alaska, containing 0.45 | ‘acres, and it is now in the files m| the District Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- | versely any of the above mentioned i I | i in the district land office within the | land should file their adverse claim | Moose Lodge Ne. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor—JOHN LADELY Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN —_—e ""The Rexall Smre Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianes—Mausical Instruments and Supplies (Pronounce bi-ling-gwal, first I as in BITE, accent second; 2. What American general and all of his detachment of.troopers What is the average age at which baseball players reach their | period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Manager. First publication, July 6, 1949. Last publication, Aug. 31, 1949, Phone 206 . Second and Seward.. Wall Paper Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt GEORGE BROS. Widest Selectien of LIQUORS PHGNE 399 JUNEAU'S FINEST LIQUOR STORE BAVARD'S Phone 689 “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists Phone 211 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Rezsonable Rates | . B PHONE SINGLE O The Erwin Feed 0o, | PHONE 55 Office in Case Lot Grocery Phene 701 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS —— OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE ——————e Call EXPERIENCED MEN Alaska JANITORIAL Service o Remington Typewriters Phone 247 SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Near Third FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) Seward Street GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor'Co. Foot of Main Street The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 | | | MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Juneau Dairies, Inc Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Casler’s Men's Wear || cpoc G Warner Co. Formerly SABIN'S Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage HOME GBOCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 BOTANY umfl" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing Complete Outfitter for Men To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaskz Laundry DR. ROBERT SIMPSON OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined—Glases Fitied SIMPSON BUILDING B. W, COWLING COMPANY Dodge—Plymouth—Chrysler DeSoto—Dodge Trucks Phone 266 for Appointments H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Free Delivery