The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 16, 1949, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1949 PG mw G S SR LI The CAPITOL Theaire brings to Juneau FOR THE FIRST TIME the nation’s most lively newsreel WARNER PATHE NEWS Alr-E'(presied Direct from New \ork 'l‘wlce Weekly | NEWS FLASHES!? CRAZED VETERAN KILLS 13! ODOM IN FATAL CRASH! SHIBLEY MAY LOSES GAME FIGHT VS. CHANNEL! Plus Other Items in the News Worid CAPITOL BRINGS 'MONTANA MIKE, RUGGED WESTERN, “Montana Mike,” which opens a two-day engagement at the Capitol ‘Theatre tonight, claims to be the; most unusual Western ever filmed, with a hero as tough as they come| who never totes a gun yet always gets his way. And Robert Cum-! mings, in the part of Mike himself, delivers a top-drawer performance right down the line. Brian Don- levy, who thought he would be Mike’s nemesis (but thought wrong) matches him every inch of the way. Beauteous Jorja Curtright, Texas'| newest gift to the roster of leading| ladies, supplies the love interest as a strait-laced school marm whose strenuous objections to Donlevy's vmoney making activities tosses many an obstacle in the path of| his wooing and Marjorie Reynolds, |a pert hostess in his saloon, does her best (and very good it is, too) to deflect Cummings from achieving his objectives. Life in the West, circa 1885, is 'lm ther illustrated by Bill Goodwin, | | The {two houses of Congress to legislate | These houses exist to lay down the |policy of the country and to enact |lated and changes the laws that Con- { cial dicta. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE~JUNEAU, ALASKA THESE DAYS --BY-- GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY THE FOURTH HOUSE Constitution provides for for the United States, the Senate and the House of Representatives. that policy into law. Some members of the Supreme Court of the United | States, at various times, have trans- that judicial body into a legislative chamber which modifies gress passed into something quite different, in accordance with judi- Now, along comes something wholly new and outside our con- stitutional system of government. The President appoints a three- man board in a labor case. He appoints that board to evade the use of legal machinery because that would be a recognition of the Taft- Hartley Act which he opposes poli- tically. That evasion is wrong, because the President of the United States should have no option in the execution of laws passed by Con- gress. The constitution provides lof for the owner of capital, because' onge the law collapses, government becomes the instrument of the fiat! an individual or of those who advise and manipulate that indivi- dual. For years, a small group have ad- | vocated such a process. They tried | it in NRA and failed. They havel been at it since, but have never succeeded. Maybe this time they| will succeed because Harry Truman dislikes Congress. Skillfully, util-| izing- every opportunity, this group of men, some of them now organ- r ized in the A.D.A. (Americans for Democratic Action), keep plugging away at their socialistic program. Although Harry Truman naturally abhors socialism (he would laugh it out of existence), his antipathy to Congress forces him into the hands of these manipulators. | (Copyrigh, 1949, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) | STEAMER MOVEMEXTS Freighter Victoria from Seatttle, due at 1:30 a. m. Saturday. Princess Louise from Vancouver due Saturday afternoon or evening. | Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle Saturday. | Aleutian from west saheduled | no such option. In a word, the first; southbound Sunday night or Mon- [ take steps to get even with this brat | | gram'’s | room, EAST SIDE KIDS AND ROBIN HOOD AT 20TH CENTURY Action, and more action, come to the 20th Century Theatre tonight |in the double bill which will have closing performances tomorrow. Besides the East Side Kids In ‘“Come Out Fighting,” 20th - has billed .“Robin Hood of Monterey”| with Gilbert Roland. A police commissioner's son ca.nj prove to be a mighty heavy burden} to shoulder, as the East Side Kids discover to their dismay in Mono- “Come Out Fighting.” | Locked out of their own club- the Kids manage to get 1c§ re-opened provided they take care of the tender son of the-town's po- lice commissioner. Leo Gorcey and his pals are supposed to help build up the lad. But Gorcey doesn't like to play nurse to the ballet-dancing son of the commissioner, Johnny! Duncan. He has the “weakling” Johnny | put on the gloves, only to find him- self knocked silly. The rough East| Siders are taken by surprise and ¥ PAGE FIVE OO OO (S CENTURY TONITE and SATURDAY Bm Double Bill l:oIflEVys rival in the 5‘:’01’;‘“’;‘:) issue in this case is law or an-jday morning. Stuart Erwin as a*lazy sherlff Wholg .y the prevalence of law or the prefers fishing to maintaining—ori . ..uit of whim. | of the commissioner. The Kids are | really hilarious in their antics, and AND SATURDAY with CONTINUOUS SHOWS SATURDAY TONITE a.;d SIX-GUNS .. .“Montana Mike” Was Deadly With Both! Sey mxr/V bensal CJM'fi‘i‘fic ‘DoNLEVY "MoNTANA MIKE i MARJORIE. REYNOLDS Goodwin + Edgar Kennedy Stuart Erwin John Litel wa JORIA CURTRIGHT ADDED “THRILLS OF MUSIC” Walt Disney’s “INFERIOR DECORATOR” | Complete Shows 7:24-9:3 t | Feature Starts 7:54-10: 00 and Bill Tomerrow — 2:00 P. M. SPECIAL KIDDIE SHOW S E E : OH, BOY! WHAT A JOY “CURLEY" in I DISNEY CARTOONS »'» 1S beautiful color. regular show EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and Franklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTE Juneau | rather, reinstating—law-and-order, |and Edgar Kennedy, bewigged for | the fizst time in his S5-year otion | | picture career, as the town drunk.! The cast includes John Litel, Lu-| |rene Tuttle and Peter Miles. GIRL S(OUT NEWS ‘There were many happy and eager faces Wednesday afternoon when Girl Scout Troop No. 9 held " the first meeting of the year at the |home of Mrs. Zalmain Gross on Gold Belt Avenug. All tut two mem- | bers were present. We have planned a full and ex- ! citing year. Mrs. Gross, our scout leader, has ordered kits for our pro- | jects which will be glass etching and working with copper. We voted that eléction of officers would be held at the next meeting. —PAULA COOK, Reporter. | | | { Members of Girl Scout Troop No. 111 held our first meeting of the ,school year in the Resurrection Lutheran Church parlors Thursday afternoon. | Officers were elected as follows: i President, Mary Grisham; Vice President, Nancy McDowell; Secre- jtary, Ann Johnson; Treasurer, | Virginia Whitehead. Plans ‘for the year were discussed and then the meeting adjourned. H VIRGINIA WHITEHEAD, ! Reporter. | Girl Scouts Troop No.' 8 had the first meeting Thursday, September 15 in the Moose Hall. We elected new officers. President is Page | Wood, Secretary. is Penny Morri- ison and Treasurer is Susan Blan- ton. We played games and had a hula jdance by Penny Morrison. OTHILIE BREIBELBIS, Reporter. Girl Scout Troop No. 1 brought i the first meeting to order on Sep- + tember 15 at the Methodist Church. After our last year's President Page Whitehead called the meeting to order nominations were opened for President. The girls voted for . Pat Sweeney for President, Carol Leath for Secretary and Marian Glaffke for Treasurer. Only nine girls were present. We soon hope there will be more girls at the next meeting. After the meeting was closed re- freshments were served. ROSITA ZAMORA, Reporter A showdown in shaping up in the lcoal dispute. The Southern soft coax operators are refusing to pay roy&ms into the United Mine 'Workers ‘Welfare Fund until a con- trnct is signed. John L. Lewis wants the fund paid at once. He’s said to be calling a meeting of the fund trustees to make a new try for payments. FOOD SALE By CDA; 10 am, Sat. Sept. 17, nc Sem Order Omce 99 2t WESTERN MIXER SQUARE DANCING ' MODERN DANCING SCANDINAVIAN DANCING Moose Club Saturday — Seplember 17th 10 P. M. - MOOSE MEMBERS AND FRIENDS - | Roseileen Hyckembothem: Reporter, | ‘ This three-man board then sets {a pattern which is: 1. Collective bargaining is to be | industry-wide and not based upon [the plant or the company. Collec- | tive bargaining is made as remote from the workers as possible. It is to become a function of statesman- ship, unaffected by the interests jeither of the immediate workers or management. 2. This means that collective bargaining really disappears and the fantastic process of govern- control of wages, hours, working conditicjis, pensions, health ar-! rangements, prices, quotas of pro-l duction, type of production become fixed by state fiat. It is a return, without an act of Congress, to the NRA which the Supreme Court} declared to be unconstitutional. ’ 3. It establishes a national pen-| sion system, on top of a legal social | security act, the terms of the m-l tional pension system being determ- | ined neither by* the labor unions nor management, nor by an act of Congress, but by the fiat of a pr:rh-i tically irresponsible board of three which lays down a pattern as an] act of personal opinion. In this| particular instance, such pension! systems already exist, but they are the product of collectlve bargain- ing and involve contributions by, both the company and the bene- ficiary. The three-man board ar-| ranges for a non-contributory pen- {sion system. 4. No one can calculate the cost| of this system to the United States‘ in higher prices, reduced federal| revenue, in bankruptcies or in the' stabilizing of industries so that new, and small enterprises cannot step | in and risk t heir capital or that| of their associates in competition with larger and 16ng-established businesses. It will therefore limit or even end competition and estab- lish, by government action, mon- opolies. These industrial monopol- jes will be joined together in asso- ciations to make industry-wide agreements effective, and such asso- ciations will negotiate with mono- | polies of labor recognized and con- | trolled by ‘an outside agency of government appointed by the Presi- dent. 6. The entire program is a step in the socialization of industrial | income under government agencies appointed by the President. Fabian ! socialism, which is failing miser- ably in Great Britain, is thus brought to the United States. 1 6. It is a characteristic of the| unconstitutional quarrel between | the President and Congress that he | seeks to establish the points of his “fair deal” program, which Con-| gress rejects, by means which are intolerable under our system of law. Therefore, the procedure is unsound for labor as it is for man- agement, for the farmer as it is Minnis Yenkeif of Bethel is a‘lnnd their revengeful plans upset guest at the Baranof. | NOTICE * On and After Septem- at every turn. ber 16, 1949, I will not be responsible for any debts for the MINER PUBLISHING COM- PANY unless author- ized by me AL G. OVERHOLTZER, New |t ke Owner and Manager You HAVE It WHeN You Neep Ir 1 G 0" Your best ber for quick delivery Is Alr Exprese o+ . fast, dependable service by Alaska Coastal, ot low, economical rates. Your letter or wire te your merchant, requesting delivery by Air Ex-' press, assures you of having your merchandise when you most need K. to enjoy a Mellow Moment Pour a sparkling glas of Hamm’sBeer. Sipit. Linger over its luxurious flavor. For you’ll never know how smooth and mellow a beer can be until you've tasted Hamm'’s! It’s the beer for mellow moments. For yowr mellow moments, say ‘‘Here’s How!’’ with Hamm’s. THEO. HAMM IIIWING COMPANY, St. Paul, Mina, %mmflm Smooth and Mellow DISTRIBUTED BY: ODOM 328 Colman COMPANY Bldg., Seattle, Washington l"i‘l BRENT JACK LA RUE PEDRO MOIMII DOORS OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS 7:15 and 9:50 Cartoons -=- Cartoons Plus FEATURE ‘CCALASKA”®’ 'SATURDAY MORNING KIDS' MATINEE BIG AWARDS DOORS OPEN AT 9:30 CARTOONS and FEATURE at 10:00 For Each Dollar Spent at the Stores listed helow you will receive an Award Voucher fo turn in at The 20th Century SATURDAY MORNING “KIDS MATINEE" Parsons Electric Co., Nance 5-10-25 Store, Juneau-Young Hardware Co., Tot-fo-Teen Shop, Fred Henning-Complete Outfitter, War- field-Drug, Gus George Grocery, Sugar Bowl Cafe, Juneau Marine Supply, "I. Goldstein" S i PRINCE MATCHABELLX WITH THE PURCHASE OF'/ Stradivari COLOGNE PAIIFUMEE no'ru FOR $6).. TAR] [roR UMITID TIME OMY] A Pn.r]ulaeNMttdAbdli S ew perfumed updzugulht:hlfihnw- longer . . . . gtl‘rl:divnl crown of HARRY RACE, DRUGGIST, Inc. Triangle Corner BANENSNEENTEIEIRTRBUENRIRNATNANIMTRIENSRINIRAIRIRINAARETNNNILANNCNSRNRNSNAN

Other pages from this issue: