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PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA unequalled for sheer beauty ... NYLON COTILLION SET Gown—shirred bodice dropes gracefully to midriff, flowing into full sweeping skirt. Ballet Blue, Swing Yellow, Waltz Pink, Can-Can Chartreuse, Conga Coral. 32-42. Trunk—perfect fitting, comfy panty edged with nylon net. Ballet Blue, Waltz Pink, White. 4.7 Slip — misty nylon net trims the shaped front bodice ond hem of this perfectly fitting Alip. Ballot Blue, Waltz Pink, White. 32-40 Petticoat—slim hipped, straight ed to give a smooth skirt ine. Sheer nylon net circles the hem. EBallet Blue, Waltz Pink, White. Small, Medium, Large Bedjacket—feminine elegance for lounging or sleeping. Sheer nylon with ruffled yoke and push up § Ballet Blue, Waltz Pink, Conga Coral. Small, Me targe . B. M ,Bzfmzaé, & QUALITY SINCE /887 THE q }hanovist who, out of love of the D E D A YS;work)11g class, goes into a factory S B - ‘:10 show ;hm (l‘m can hwurk longer . ours and produce a bigger quota GREORGE E. SOKOLSKY Tlhnn other workers? Why should | he be a Stakhanovist, if he already has a car and also a radio and also |an electric refrigerator and his wife | puts on so much cosmetics that it is almost impossible to tell the| ‘diflerence between a beautiful ac- The warmongers betray their own | tress and an ordinary wife? | masses. For instance, in America | nearly every worker owns an auto- | mobile. Does he get the automo- bile as a special privilege because he is a true follower of monopoly capitalism? Nobody asks him. | HOOLIGANISM AMONG THE WARMONGERS By GEORGI GRAMADA, Special Krass Correspondent To all this Truman is blind. He only thinks of making more bombs | to spread American automobiles radios and lipsticks over the world, | corrupting the Balkan dwarf, Tito,| % with machinery, until every man h:"g:;”fl:‘g“?"l y‘s" i :lt':::)i)ii‘:,wm have so much that he will not Maybe he does not have the money; !understand why the class struggle, | so0 he still buys an automobile. Huv} Fip SIIRAL BRNEL And. awash te- can he buy an automobile without tween opposites, is essential to cul- money in a capitalist country? You ture and civilization. These work- should ask such a question, because ‘ers ignore dialectics altogether, here in America everything is Yesterdn{, £ p"“.k('d .um 8 JOUREY topsy-turvy. He borrows the money. man who looked intelligent. So we There if always somebody. in sat in a saloon and drank beer. T, ATiiotlos who want. to A inctias | myself, ;I:reter tea or vodka. Tea They advertise in newspapers; they I couldn’t get in the saloon and| Gholt oo ths radio. Tn IaBt whels if I asked for vodka, in this police- | the worker goes to buy thé Aok state, controlled by Wall Street, mobile, the salesman ‘giyes higy & where Hoover‘ADulles forces domi- piece of paper to sign and already nnlte Truma:mm, they would fast he borrowed money. He sits down telephone the Fm and maybe I 3 e car and duiess PR ks v_vould have immigration troubles he owns it. And the funty thlng'm‘e Comrade Eisler who brought to 15 lamt he does owia Sw et b b | L WERD. Woresrs . Tratemal| greetings from the Twelve who are & capitalistio contragiction. being railroaded by monopoly-capi- Nobody tells these workers what|y ., g being framed by Card- kind of car he should buy. A| Y % |inal “Spellman, the defender of black one, a red one, a grey one, a | black darkness. yellow one. Some are big, some are: small. Nobody has an eye for uni-| so, I says to the worker: formity. It is ail confusion. | “How is it that dialectical mater- What does the worker do wnth{m“sm is unknown to you?” his car? Does he go to meetings| He answers: “Come again!” to become familiar with the great| So I say: “You don’t know dia- philosophy of dialectical material-!jectical . . . » ism? Does he go to the woods t0| He interrupts me: sit on a stone and read the colos- sal works of J. Stalin? Such grand | activities are not for the uncultur- ed who are betrayers of the work- ing class. No! They use the cars to go to| work. 8o the cars stand, thousands | g of them, on streets, on parking lots, in rain, in snow, in the hot sun they have there, waiting for each individual worker to come out of his private enterprise. What anti- | social waste! Cannot the cars be| “oh! Youl Eddie Cantor talking naturally?” Such capitalistic contradictions! (Copyright, 1949, King Fea- tures Syndicate, Inc.) BICYCLES at Madsen’s. used in a social pool, so that all| may use fewer cars? Do they need 35,000,000 cars? Do small school | boys need cars to find love which | in Russia we can find anywhere, | even without cars? Do women need cars to buy meat and canned | soup and marinated herring? 1 Such is the waste and anti-social | attitudes of these warmongers that each one wants his own car. I have : seen workers where each member of the family has a car of his own. ‘What kind of government do these | Trumanists produce when they let | anybody, for no reason at all, have & car? | What is left to reward the Stak- ‘ NEAU, ALASKA washes and dries in minutes .. . never needs ironing eaile NILON JERSEY RUSSIAN | PROTEST | WAS ,| The United States has rejected out- right Russia’s protest against estab- lishment of the Western German Federal Republic. An Luxite’s wonderful new “Cotillion Set” . . . five figure-flattering match- ing pieces in time-saving, labor- saving nylon . . . sprinkled with dainty nylon petal appliques. Run- proof, shrinkproof, these Luxite nylon lovelies are wonders for wear, washability, long-lasting beauty. In lilting “Dancing Colors” to put Spring in your step. underthings and sleepwear by ““m’nflflf REJECTED HINGTON, Oct. 18—®—| WASHINGTON, Oct. The U. S. fur trade is BKIGHT SEASON FACES TRAPPERS WITH DRAWBACKS 18.—(p— | $100,000,000 in the stockpiling of “still far from healthy,” the Fish and Wild- life Service said today. DOUGLAS NEWS TONSILECTOMY Claudia Jean Smith underwent a tonsilectomy operation last Fri- day at the Juneau Clinic. Claudia is the five year old daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Claude Smith, and “tms morning’s report is that she |is well and playing. SALINA (RUZ MEN RESCUED BY FWS CRAFT (Continued from Page 1) Imin F. Ivey of Long Beach, Calif.,| RETURNING HOME 1 and one or two of his officers,| mMys. H. Spethman was a passenger the Coast Guard said. }on the Princess Louise enroute to The schooner sent out her first| her home at Papillion, Nebraska. SOS early yesterday that she was|Mrs, Spethman spent two months | afire in’the engine room. The|yisiting her daughter Mrs. James flames quickly spread to the general | pevon and family, during which cargo in the holds and lumber|time she was here to welcome a ‘uhuve decks, forcing the men to|pew born granddaughter. abandon ship. Wreck to Come Ashore FRANKLIN HERE In midafternoon the blazing huil Glenn Franklin, Interior mining slowly heeled over and plunged be- | man and Territorial Representative neath the waves, reappearing 15 arrived here last week to join his minutes later split in two sections. family, and to make their home A Coast Guard cutter was dispatch- | here for the winter. ed to the area from Grays Harbor to tow the derelict to shore. VISITING DAUGHTER The Salina Cruz met disaster one; Mrs. Chas. Motichka of North day out of Vancouver, B. C., bound | Fork, Idaho, arrived here last week- for Honolulu with a general cargo.|end via PAA to visit her daughter, Though of Panamanian l‘EgiStl‘Y“‘Mrs, Don Neal and family. she was owned by the Seven Seas Trading and Shipping Co. of Los| SEWING CLASS Angeles and Anthony C. Stralla. | gewing instruction classes under | Stralla, also known as Tony COr-|ype Extension Service of the Uni-| nero, formerly operated two gamb- ersity of Alaska will begin here ling ships off the Southern Call | tomorrow afternoon beginning at 2 fornie const. | o'clock in the -City Council Cham- Lerfs. Edyth Walker, agent, will |be in charge. Women who are | interested are to take patterns, | material and other necessary eqmp—" | i ment. EASTERN STAR Nugget Chapter No. 2, Order of | Eastern Star will meet this evening |at 8 o'cleck. Visitors are invited | to attend. ‘ (Continued from Page One) 118 IRAVEI- pAA; A4 LEAVE JUNEAY contract authority for a program of | Alaskan Public Works, The House | Pan American World Air\\'ays:, had approved only half the amount. | yesterday brought 24 passengers in- | WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.-—lM*Ait° Juneau and took 44 out. Ten| compromise $15,585,863,498 military | Persons were carried through here appropriation bill financing a 58- |{rom the North, They were: group Air Force passed the House| From Annette, Island: H. C. Har- by voice vote today and went to the Senate. Passage of the big money bill | helped clear the way for final ad- | journment of this session of Con- HOUSE PASSES BILL om Whitehorse: Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Harris, R. McRitchie, J. N. Morgan. | From Fairbanks: Howard Lyng, | igress. Congressional leaders now |Cleta Welch, Wilson Doney, Loren to get away tomorrow. Oldroyd, Gladys Seeds, Charles Mil- The bill had been bottled up|ler, John Fitzpatrick, K. C. Hil- drum, Louis Bruns, B. P. Svendsen. From Seattle: Charles Dahlquist,’ T. Greenbank, Hazel Hope, Rudy Notar, Blarne Olson, Gertrude Palmer, Esther Travis, C. L. Travis, Susanna Seal. Because the Senate and the House| | couldn’t agree on Air Force funds.| The House insisted on a 58-group | Air Force. The Senate wanted 48, as did President Truman. The| House won. The difference is about | $740,000,000. To Ketchikan: Kenneth Lauritz- | But the Senate chalked up afen. j partial victory by getting the{ To Seattle: Dorothy Spence, C. W. Stevenson, Chris Lamareaux, Bjorn Torkilson, R. W. Walker, J. White- hall, Pete Pedersen, J. G. Adderson, Dr. J. D. Smith, Esther Williamson, Charles Gehah, Lyle Jones, Ken- neth Kadow, Robert Griswald, E.| ! House to agree to a cutback of defense materials. The Senate had wanted a $275- 000,000 cutback but the House voted solidly against any cut. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1949 Dewey, H. D. Shanks, Mrs. K. De Long, Huben Grimstead, O. Frans- wog, Mrs. Lottie Long, James Long, Shirley Long, Jeanette Long, Charl- es Daniel, Ernie Jacobs, N. Rossan, H. Hess, J. Cartwright, A. McCor- mick, R. Long, Mr. and Mrs, Chester Zinn, Victoria Zinn, Joe Toney, Jack O'Brien, Suzanne Stevenson. 2,000 MILES OF CHINA COASTLINE HELD BY COMMIES (By The Associated Press) Chinese Communists tightened their hold on 2,000 miles of China’s coastline today by seizing two more important ports. Red amphi- bious troops capture the old treaty island port of Amoy. Pro-Commun- ist newspapers in Hong Kong said the Communists now control Swat- ow, another big port about 115 miles south of Amoy. Observers said the Communists would turn Amoy into a base for an assault on Formosa, Chiang Kai-shek’s island bastion, 140 miles away. In Chungking, the Nationalists’ gloomy piovisional capital, Acting President Li Tsung-jen said: “We can still turn the tide again Com- munists if the renovate the govern- ment without delay.” If reforms were not undertaken immediately, Li said, our position will be hopeless.” HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Hugh B. Antrim was admit- ted to St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday. Veronica Constantino, A. B. Phil- lips and Fred Carrillo were dis- charged from St. Ann’s yesterday. Elsie Hayes of Haines, Elsie Mil- ton of Yakutat and Teddy Hanson of Yakutat were admitted Government Hospital yesterday. Hazel Albert and baby girl of An- goon and Lawrence Marvin of Hoo- nah were discharged from the Gov- ernment Hospital. o the; | .TWO OFFICERS RESIGN DUTIES IN JUNEAU BPWC Reports and resignations took place at the Business and Profes- sional Women's Club luncheon meeting yesterday in the Baranof Terrace Room. Mrs. C. J. (Helen) Ehrendreich, Fresident, reviewed the club’s spon- sership of the Maxim Schapiro con- cert last week, asproject undertaken ll*y the club when it was understood (there would be no Juneau concert series this season. | “We feel,” she said, “that the | expens2 involved in bringing such an eminent and popular concert artist here was well repaid in the appreciation and enjoyment shown by Juneau people.” The club also expressed its thanks to Gov. and Mrs. Ernest Gruening for opening the Governor's House | for the reception after the concert. Mr. Schapiro stopped in briefly during the luncheon to thank club jmembers for their hospitality, ahd for providing the opportunity of a return visit to Juneau. Mrs. John (Betty) McCormick gave the final report on the Min- tield Home Tag Day, which brought a total of $1,047.61. The club’s spec- ial thanks were extended to the | Teen Age Club, Mrs. James Googé and Mrs. Frank Pearce of Douglas. The club accepted with regret the | resignation of Mrs. Ehrendreich as | President, and Miss Mary Breland, as Treasurer. | Due to the absence of Dr. Evelyn i Butler, First Vice President, Miss Elizabeth Mosher, Second Vice Pre- sident, will serve as acting Presi- dent. Her first ofticial duty was ap- pointment of a Treasurer pro tem, | pending a special election. Miss %Ruth Rogall was named to that post. | AMBULANCE FUND Special showing of the film “Fish- ing In Alaska.” 8 p. m., Method- ist Church, Tuesday evening. Pub- lic invited. 26 2t Remember Girls, Tomorrow night is "LADIES' NIGHT" at BAILEY’S BAR American note delivered in Moscow also sharply criticized the sulisequent creation of the Moscow- supported People’s Democratic Re- gime in the Soviet occupation zone of East Germany. The Soviets have contended that Dr. surgeon at Mt. Edgecumbe Hospital, | after completing a trip of inspec- tion to the westward, was in Ju-: neau yesterday prior to his return.' He visited Bethel to see the crip- |pled children there. Dr. mean like Schnozzle Durante and|officer in charge of Mt. Edgecumbe, | conferred with Dr. Alaska Native Service medical di- rector, yesterday, center and work eral. He was due to return late in ‘the afternoon. the Western Powers are trying to convert Western Germany into also low that many gave up trapping “drill The v. the counter charge that the Soviets have set up in their zone “a large centralized police force, force moreover which is well equip- ped with military weapons and led by former German army officers.” ground.” 5. denied this and made a police | | DR. PHILLIP R. MOORE ACK FROM INSPECTION TRIP, WESTWARD TOWNS Phillip H. Moore, orthopedic Robert H. Shuler, medical James Googe, concerning his Alaska in gen- 222 > URROWS WELDING CO. PHONE 7. Frank G. Ashbrook, the agency's chief of wild fur-animal investigat- ions, but it this way: “The outlook for trappers titis BILL GOES TO TRUMAN ! The House gave in on the' $100,- 000,000 figure. R. Davis. ry Smith, Mark Ariteuse, Green, Mrs. William Wasser, John | Gene Lambert, Dan Johnson, Jer- D. D. Shuffleboard Confest (Every Wednesday Night) season is a trifle brighter than it| (yASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—@ has been for two or three Seasons, | congress sent to the White House but it is still not sufficiently en- /¢ 4,y 5 $15,585,863,468 appropriation couraging to create a rush for trap- |, finance the Armed Services. It ping licenses and traps.” | includes funds for a 58-group Air| Ashbrook, in an introduction to | moree. | the service’s abstract of trapping| rmpe House approved the measure laws of 1949-50, said prices paid o | firgt by voice vote. A short time trappers for furs last season Were|jater the Senate approved the bill, also by voice vote. after two or three weeks. | ¥ ‘For some of the furs hnrvested} there was no market whatsoever,” Ashbrook said. . Mrs. Ann Herbstreith of Juneau “Storage houses are bulging With | joined the staff of the Juneau quantities of not-wanted furs, such | Young Hardware Company yester- ias raccoon, opossom, skunk, f‘”“day. Mrs. Herbstreith, a resident and coyote. |of Star Hill, is the new bookkeep- “Wanted furs, like muskrat, mink, |er for the firm. squirrel, marmot and Persian | lamb, have advanced 10 to 15 per-| White Sewing Machine and Gift cent from former seasons. but thejsy;op, across from Coast Guard U. 8. fur trade is still far from Bldg., Woolens 72-inch wide, $2.95 healthy.” and $3.95. 26 3t H ON STAFF OF J-Y-H CO. N oy AIR EXPRESS! Alr express means Immediate delivery to youl Simply write or wire your favorite shop er your business house, requesting that your merchandise be shipped by Alr Express, and Alaska Coastal speeds it to you in & matter of hours| Dependable serve Ice at lowest tates by Alr Express, ' Gt etving Southeastern £S | . Take the beautiful new streamliner PORTLAND - SAN FRANCISCO. FOR THE TRAVEL THRILL of a lifetime ride Southern Pacific’s sen- sational new streamliner Shasta Day- light on your next trip between Portland and San Francisco. It leaves daily 7:45 a.m., arrives 11:15 p.m.—by far the fastest running time in history between the two cities. You can ride this fast new luxury train at very low fares. Only $12 one way, $21.60 roundtrip (plus federal tax) Portland-San Francisco, on sale daily. Low fares from other points too. Through big “Skyview Picture Win- dows” of this dramatic red-and-orange dayliner you'll really see the wonders features: “windowpanes that breathe” f the Route . . . the verdant for clear vision, our famous S. P. bag- gVi.llamette River Valley, the high gage elevators, public address s Cascade Mountains, Odelland Klamath ~ zone-controlled no-draft v Lakes, Mt. Shasta, the Sacramento “feathertouch” doors that o the River Valley, Shasta Dam’s Lake, Pit whim of your finger and beau in- River Bridge and Lassen Peak volcano terior colors inspired by the colorful ...alby Sa}‘{ciwa 3 route it serves. ; On the Shasta Daylight, like our Each Shasta Daylight (diesel-electric California Daylights, ’s a seat re- ~ pro| ) has 9 chair cars, diner, coffee served for you without charge (for shop (always open), tavern car and each child, t0o). It’s cushioned in foam pean-obwvatmn. Nearly $5,000,000 rubber and adjustable to the angle were spebflf. to give yotl; ttl;is glew, fn&t., ou prefer. sceni ain way avel on YOGSl enjoy other Shasta Daylight Bacific Coast. Troins from Vancouver, B.C., provide convenient connections at Seattle and Porte land with the SHASTA DAYLIGHT at low chair-car fares. For details see your local rail agent or write K. B. Currie, Canadian General Agent, 619 Howe St., Yancouver, B.C, SP.... . The friendly Southern Pacific » | [ { 91 4 9z, ocos 10 of