The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 10, 1949, Page 5

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1949 "‘--.~ Rl I { FITZGERALD } Y KENTUCKY'S BOURBON Genvine SOUR MASA Kentucky Straight Sourbon Whiskey BOTTLED IN BOND 100 PROOF . | STITZR=WEIER DISTRLERY, INC. » LOUISVELE, €Y. e o w— Distributea tnrougnoyj Alaska by ODOM COMFANY There’s an easier way this way YNiury coATING Yes, this is the easy way to protecf machinery, orchard-heaters, all metal surfaces against corrosion. Just paint (or spray) with Stand- ard Utility Coating. Or simply dip smaller equipment. Protects from rust throughout the year! STANDARD OIL CumPANY OF CALIFORNIA THESE DAYS SN 4 GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY THE WORLD SERIES (By Georgi Gramada, Special | Krass Correspondent) | To confuse the masses, they give here big cicuses, but the people are naive and vulgar and do not appre- ciate the culture. So instead of of- chestras and ballets, they have grown men who play like little school boys with balls and bats and running around playing tag. This they call baseball, but the name is also a fraud, because the ball is net on a base at all but in the play- | er's hand sometimes and sometimes | it is just flying around. Now they have all finished play- ing for the summer and will soon retire to their private enterprises which shows the corruption of their spirit and their failure to grasp the social significance of their clownish support of Wall Street. Only a few | games remain, but these will be carried out in the degenerative | competitive atmosphere instead of |according to the principles of the | late Andrei Alexandrovitch Zhda- nov, whose dialetic materialism led | him to the conclusion that games | are of the people who understand | the inherent evolutionary qualities | of Leninism by Stalin. As he ob- jected to the music which he could not understand and forbade them ‘as imitation of bourgeois decadence, so he would have ridiculed this | childish game. | 4 These remaining games, called | “The World Series,” will be played | between two pseudo youth groups named ‘‘Yankees” and “Dodgers.” The Yankees come from the Bronx which is a proletarian Faubourg | controlled by the Wall Street poli- tician, Edward Flynn, who has close | associations with the Truman anti- | | Roosevelt forces in the Democratic party which is not democratic but bi-partisan of Hoover-Dulles char- acteristics. | The Yankee youth group is a racist faction practising Jim Crow | and similar mass wrongs. In fact, | it is a penetration of working class | activities because most of the mem- | bers of the group are not inhabx-" tants of the Bronx at all, nor are | they proletarians. They are, in| fact, Kulaks who are hired to cap- ! ture the imagination of youth and | to lead them away from the Marx- | ist-Leninist-Stalinist dialectics to | enjoy themselves by yelling, shout- ing, standing up and stretching, eating dogs as a hot dish and pop- sicles as a cold dish on top of | which they pour a brown, sweet water called Coco-Cola. Such a black year on these capitalists who poiscn their own people! The'’ other youth group who will compete is called the Dodgers. This ‘means that they run away whex\‘ they should- stand still. You will| |recall that the English facist, | Charles Dickens, portrayed such a character, called the Artful Dodger. { The true name for this youth group is “Dem Bums,” which in the dialect of Brooklyn, where they come from, is a recognition of the glorious art of the Soviet writer, Maxim Gorki, who wrote about| bums in the Czarist reaction; also | Stienbeck, the American renegade. Gorki discovered bums before the | Marshall Plan countries heard of ;such an ethnological entity. Brooklyn is a vast devastated area which the proletariat have taken away from the degraded bourgeoisie who lived there in mag- nificance wrested from the toil and | sweat of the working class. In| Brooklyn, they are so naive that| once a tree grew there, so they| immortalized it in a book. The people of Brooklyn speak a dialect| which most Americans do not un- derstand; therefore a vast racist movement has developed against Brooklyn. To combat this white supremacy Ku Klux Klanism, the| | class-conscious society for the pre- }vemion of degrading remarks about | Brooklyn (SPDRB) has been organ- | ized to stamp out anti-dialectic re- marks concerning Brooklyn’s dm-“ lect. i { In Brooklyn also there used to \be a proletarian thugee organiza- | tion called, “Murder, Inc.” was a right-wing deviation, organ- ized by Trotzkyists to confound the lrevolunonary masses by utilizing EYES EXAMINED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and Franklin PHONE 508 FOR LENSES PRESCRIBED Juneau APPOINTMENTS ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANYA FREIGHTER SAILING SCHEDULE H. E. GREEN, Agent — Phone 2 This | | raised last year. RADIO LOG KINY Alaska Broadcasting Co. C.B.8. DIAL 1460—JUNEAU MONDAY EVENING 6:00—News. 6:15—Music. 6:20—Sports Scene. 6:30--Dinner Music. 6:45--Local News. 7:00—Sammy Kaye Showroom. 7:15—Jimmy kutleage-ABC. 7:30—ARTHUR GODFREY-CBS. 8:00—Weather report. 8:05—Music to Read By. 8:30—ABE BURROWS-CBS. 9:00—Alaska News, 9:15—Viking Varieties. 9:30—HENRY JEROME OR- CHESTRA-CBS. 9:30—JOHNNY DOLLAR-CBS. 10:00—News. 10:15—Drifting on-a Cloud. 10:30—Weather report. | 10:35—Sign Off. TUESDAY MORNING AND AFTERNOON Sign On. 7:00—Dunking with Druxman. 7:30—Local Weather. 7:30—News Summary 8:15—News Headlines. 8:20—Morning Thought. 8:25—Weather report. 8:30—Cote Glee Club. 8:45—Lenny Herman Orchestra. 9:00—Music for the Missus. 9:30—Weather report. 9:35—Airlane Trio. 9:45—YOU AND CHEMISTRY- CBs. 10:00—News. 10:05—Vocal Varieties. 10:15—Piano Playhouse. 10:30—Milady’'s Memo. 11:00—MEET THE MISSUS-CBS. 11:30—Listeners’ Digest-ABC. 11:45—March of Time. 11:55—Weather report. 12:00—Salon Serenade. 12:15—News. 12:30—Meet the Band. 1:00—GARRY MOORE-CBS. | 2:00—FRONT PAGE FEATURES- CBS. 2:30—Light Classics. 3:00-ELMO ROPER-CBS. 3:15—Pipes of Melody. 3:30—Parade of Hits. 4730—BARNYARD FOLLIES- CBS. 4:45—Western Serenade. 5:00—Equal Pay. 5:15—Woman's Club. 5:30—TREASURY BANDSTAND- i CBS. | All programs subject to change iue to conditions beyond our con- : trol. Bakuninist terrorism, especially in| Trade Unions. “Murder, Inc.” disappeared because these deviations | lost their mass base. The cflpital—‘ |ist provocateurs have so completely | disappeared in Brooklyn that the Hoover-Dulles Republicans have sought an alliance with the Amer- jcan Labor Party. Tomorrow I will how describe | these men-children play in their circus to divert the people from their deep depression, the hollow | chains that bind them to Truman- | ism, the mass hunger for Marxism, and their undying fear of the atom bomb which is no longer a secret. (Copyright, 1949, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) SCOUT KICK-OFF TOMORROW WITH SHARPE PRESENT Campaign workers for the Boy Scouts will have the opportunity to hear O. D. Sharpe, Region 11 Executive, tomorrow morning at the kick-off breakfast to be held in the Gold Room at the Baranof Hotel.| Ten teams will sit with their cap- tains at special tables, and follow- | ing the 7:30 a m. breakfast they will choose the names of prospective givers to the annual Boy Scout campaign. Campaign Chairman A. B. Phillips asked all team members to be present promptly, in order that the program could be conclud- ed before 9 o'clock, Sharpe is arriving from Fairbanks today, having spent the last week there and at Anchorage with Scout Executive Maurice Powers. Sharpe supervises the Boy Scout Programi in Washington, Orgon, Idaho, Mon- tana, and Alaska, and was instru- mental in the organization of the| Alaska Council four years ago. This is his second trip through the Ter- ritory, having made a similar tour two years ago. In addition to gen- eral information on latest develop- ments in the Scouting world, he brings word on planning for the National Jamboree to be held at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, next summer. Powers reports excellent response to the annual campaigns at An- chorage and Fairbanks, with both towns exceeding their amounts The Fairbanks campaign is not concluded, tut they are nearing the $8,000 mark in the city. Last year's campaign at Juneau MAY | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA K(;AGWOOD, ( TWQ EGGS SCRAMBLED, \WAKE uP/) N\, BUTTERED TOAST . it 2 AND COFFEE AY FRIENDS, ASK FEE, FIE, FOE AnD FUMIL— THAS OUR NEW YES, BUT WHAT WiLL WE DO WE PICKED \rop A LINE OH,HELLO, MR. FFICER.,.. MY KID... HE AT W) LSN..C&MON HE'S DEZP'RATELY SICK... T GOTTA GIT THERE... D-DON'T STOP US... HE'S IN DANGER IN ADVANCE...L AIN'T TAKIN NO yd CHANCES ! pyrf STEP ON IT... T'LL PAY TH' FINE...IT! A MATTER A LIFE AN’ DEATH I LIKE GHORT SPEECHES, LADDY—AND YU JUST CAME TO YOUR PUNCH LINE | v IF IT WILL MAKE AMENDS FOR Y/ 616, THOSE THUGS TRIED TO KILL YOUR. SHOCKING EXPERIENCE & YOU —NOW YOU SUDDENLY REMEM- IN MY VILLAGE, THEYRE AT BER THAL YOU MUST TAKE OFF ...y OF COURSE, TS NONE OF OUR "GOOD' BAY, MUCG. EASY, NOW—WE’'VE COT TO GET DE GARACG REPAIRMAN, \TO DO QUR ITS A JOLT, SON. BUT WHAT'S DONE CAN'T BE UNDONE— OR HADN'T BETTER BE! WE THOUGHT IT WOULD BE BETTER THIS WAY, LIKE KIDS! BUT YOU MAY GET OVER THAT. | AND YoU DIDN'T INVITE US TO THE WEDDING ? YOU MEAN YOURE MARRIED, CoRKY ? THIS WAY, HOPE. BUT Y00-H000 oo WAKE UP, TYLER! MY LITTLE PUDDIN' PIE IN) THE PATCHWORK TIE WANTS TO SEE YOU TH' FOOL THING 1S ROMAGNETIC 1'M SORRY, BUT MR.TYLER IS IN CONFERENCE WITH HIS 7)) BOARD OF B8\ DIRECTORS H] THAR, ROSY JAWS! I CRAVE TO SEE “TIELESS” TY TYLER THIS VERY INSTANCE BUT IT WON'T PREVENT ME FROM SINGING - VL. GET MY F o’ M 50 SORRY - MAGGIE -DARLIN' IT'5 TCO BAD-NOW YO CAN'T PLAY THE BJANO // DADDY-DID YOU KNOW THAT MOTHER HURT HER FINGER ? WHY DON'T YOIJ GO IN AND SYMPATHIZE s WITH HER? HA! NOW SHE CAN'T PLAY THE PIANO /L MUSTNT LET HER KNOW HOW I FEEL ABOUT THAT / M. S. SAILOR’S SPLICE CALLS AT: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Pelican and Sitka. netted $5490.75, Powers said, and expressed the hope that the re- sponse of Juneau and Douglas resi- dents would reflect their satisfac- tion with the excellent’ program which has operated on the Channel during the past year. MASONIC NOTICE Regular meeting Monday, October 10 at 7:30 pm.—J. W, Leivers, Sec. I (T

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