The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 21, 1950, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR EMBER OF flu Im Empue (n\u ANY A ca President TION RATES cau and Douglas for $1.50 per month 8.00; one year, §15.00 ix n in advance, $7.50 Office. £02: B e, 974 ASSOCIATED P! The latest economic of Washington is the theory deficit in the Federal budget next year ness. This viewpoint is based upon two ideas that the outpouring as the will stimulate tr: sition that business is helped by the an unbalanced budget. effect of These The more the we that. But some o stimu can be DANGEROU National shall be, for a while. ilants 1c kept in theories are STIMULATION fallacy to come bouncing out that a five-billion-dollar “will help busi- One is of funds through such channels Service Life Insure le directly. ance policy dividends ¥ he idea is flatior And the other all right as far as tt government spends the more prosperous Th somehow, s no question abou , there must be day. a rec and we can’t continue to live on such expensive than the hum a state of feverish energy indefinitely more body , any by means of drugs. r(lx»]lzxr:, are taken these days not to buy service or public ! improvements, but to pay the interest on debt. Furth- 1t of a quarter of a trillion indebtedness i ething that will continue ,h. take a silent but nevertheless real toll of our way of i life for countless years It's bad enough a ! ermore, the great dead wei: dollars’ to come it 1ut making it worse that hould not have to resort to h stimulants. STAND/ \Rl)l/l D ARMS Although the arms standar Britain and Canada has been announced, in a sense it is not a new program at all. One of the great lessons of the war was the inanity of completely dif- ferent types of equipment among the fighting allies. An effort to promote uniformity along certain lines has been going on quietly since that time. Probably the most meaningful single ad » was the seemingly insignificant agreement a year so ago to begin standardization of screw threads. Obviously, if equipment can be made interchange- able between the three countries the total military trength will be greatly increased, for it will represent 1 combined force rather than three separate entities. The same principle holds in the pooling of scien- tific knowledge which is the inevitable counterpart of arms standardization. This is in effect the extension | to the working level of the integration that already has taken place in defense planning. Eventually the standardization program ought to encompass all the zation program with just or Atlantic Pact countries. But it is wholly I al that | the first m'o"clnmge should be between three na- !x ns so closely kit by kinship and devotion to free | institutions. | Standardizsticn, of course, does not imply that each country will have exactly the same equipment. Rather, t means that the arms program of the three coun- ries will be complementary—that there will be a sort of division of labor. It means that American nmunition and parts will fit British guns, and full realization of such plans will of necessity e several years, and probably the most signifi- work must be done in industry thro as the Munitions Board. Meanwhile, reat deal can be accomplished in allied fields how- through the adoption of uniform training techni telephone 1d parts terminology and the like. ‘Child only 22 months old has vocabulary of 1,000 words."—News item. We'll bet we can guess which x she belongs to. We're not calamity howling. Nor are we point- | ing to an uncertain and nebulous danger in the fu- ture. The danger is right here with us. Study any Treasury report, and see how many of the taxpayers’ Weather af Aiaska Poinis er rtl S sburg i ATTENTION ted Commu Mo ACROSS vehicle es orthern bird 2nd forth Lease Wrong 0ld cloth easure . Kind of porcelain . Stop Spoke FUND 1§ | express appreciation to each x:‘Lu S of these We want them to ‘[Uuuvm at school, | know that their efforts were in- forgotten by ¢ funds. Orphaned, | dee ppreciatd . You may rest! .5—Clear | O government wards becat their | assured that the parcels and gifts 0. ear | OWn families cannot provide for | whic u sent, as well as the 5_Clear | them, these children range in age|money, will te issued to the stu- 3—Clear | from 10 to 20 3 dents worthy of ur efforts. This 8—Partly Cloudy | need was discovered more than Christmas is really going to be out- -25—Clear | Year go by Mrs. Helen Ottk nding because of this.” 0—Snow | ing an extended stay she m 1 the hospital. Neither tubercula It is hoped tnat a permanent 24 I nor orthopedic patients, the child- organization may be established 41—Cloudy | Yén are school students from all|to remember these less fortunate 4—Cl | parts of Alaska. children on their birthdays and at 33 ¢ 4 | Christmas, A fund has'been started A Finding that other fu and or-fand some individuals and organi- 11- Pantly. Clond .:.«(_ unv\: could not vide for | zations have indicated interest that 14—Party Cloudy | small up, whose may lead to establishment of the 18- Snow !\-‘u outgrown the toj project, which may even extend 8_Clear Cttke d(wu'd_lvh(‘ pre-Christmas | to rovidi funds for higher 34 Ray | S€ason to soliciting a fund which | schooling for worthy students, ac- 0—Snow | &¥€W to $200 and luded ¢ cording to Mrs. Ottke. 44_Rain{ & lothing, games, and reco Those interested in such a pro- 30—Clear | Reiable Transf ded free de-|ject are asked to contact Mrs. Show | 1VerY of two large coxes to Alaska | Ottke, or Mr. Penrod at Mt. E Clotuy | Coastal Airlines, which transported | cumbe school. 7 | them without k i S Letters of appreciation have aphic Society | received from x Penrod, seal €0 | intendent of sc SPECIAL (HR THANKS EXTENDED 100ls at Mt children the your contributions Lie—and you id couble for respect. ISTMAS b Iy | sor LED;| get more your REVE I wish it were possible to pi thank you and many who have contr ml'cd to this fund, which you I generously | provided us. I wonder if you could lly sor Nafural Love Is by indulging foolish ideas we can continue to flive beyond our means and spend ourselves into an everlasting prosperity. In reasonably good times, we | such § THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU, ALASKA | | | JANUARY 21 Agnes F. Adsit William Reck Ellis C. Reynolds ‘Rev. H. G. Hillerman Don Freimuth M JANUARY 22 Howard Dilg Helen Wilcox M Roy Rutherford Mrs. Mamie Sutton George Thomas R Grace Mr: Robertson SCHOOL DISTRICT ASKS FORECLOSURE ON CHILKOOT LAND for sale to satisty a property worth more million dollars Petition tax lien of than a third of a was filed today in the district clerk’s office by the Haines Inde- pendent School District. The school cistrict, adjacent to but separate from the City of Haines, asks for foreclosure and order of sale on six pieces of real estate containing more than 500 acres because of non-payment of | $2,490.36 in taxes for 1048. Largest and most valuatle piece rJI property charged with owing amount to $2444 is Port formerly known | Haines. The | acco, south of as said to contain 383 aluo(l at $333,854. The acres, valued at $4,850, owes taxes of $32.35 the petition alleges. Smallest amount was on a 16- 77 cents in taxes was due the petition de- on which the school district, clared, due in taxes were amount sted as: $1.54, $4, and $7.70. The school district (i(‘cl‘fl‘o(l notices were posted in the Haines rostoffice in lieu of a publication, as there is none in the sector, and | | that the notices stated a judgment | twas due to come on January 24, 1950, UMPIRES ORGANIZE 70 BOOST BASEBALL | _ AMONG SEMI-PROS | WICHITA, Kas, Jan. 21—(®— jChartering of 31 more Umpire A sociations in its drive to give sem: Ipro games better umpiring has ll*een announced by the National Baseball Congress. In addition, four chapters were charted outside the United States in its global program, the Congress said. They included Anchorage, Alaska and Honolulu, T. H. By April 1 some 300 such umpire groups will be charted, the Con- gress said. FERRISS SIGNS UP; ARM TROUBLE OVER 9 BOSTON, Jan. —(A—Boasting that he “feels great,” Dave (Boo) Ferriss, a 25-game winner for the 1946 Boston Red Sox pennant win- ners but virtually a total loss last ceason, today forwarded his sign- ed 1950 contract to General Man- ager Joe Cronin. Ferriss, who appeared in four games and pitched but seven inn- ings in 1949, said he had rid him- self of his arm trouble and was “locking forward to the coming season.” e ughj cumbe; Adeline Kell, girls = | visor; Wendell Able, boys' S d ' D" Ry nd several other school « ue or .vor( MASONS ney was sent to schoo! = lcation of Mt. Ju- | who were instructed to purchase| SAVANNAH, Ga., Jan. 21—P— evening With j s le presents for individual |Mattie I. Love has tiled suit for a A. Degres | children. Responding to the gift, |civeree. She claims her husband, J. W. LEIVE! 1 am |Natural Love, desertad her. e Although most people in the 5] Middle Ages thought the earth was & flat, Eratosthenes, who lives 2,200 € years ago, taught that it was round. e i Farm buildin, | \]win.n,nuy a T | erils Al | 5. Age LIS 40. Godly person Pl 42, Jurisdiction: E DOWN it of the way air dresser 7 |8 o /2 il u Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 8. Correlative ot either 4. 8 . | s i y [ ootpaths Determine | Destroy nit of work hwaymen arrow back city street | . Egyptian sun a . Chief Norse god | 9. Insect . Rather than | . Kind of | cloud: abbr, | . Steamship: abbr, i Main and Front Sts. | Why Are You Sick? ur compleie examination will give you the facis— EXAM INCLUDES: Blood Pressure Chest, Lungs, Heart Sinuses, Nose, Throat Urinalysis Pelvic Exam. (Women) Kidneys and Nervous System i Prostate (Men) VERBAL REPORT IN SIMPLE LANGUAGE Ur. John M. Menigomery, D. L. (Bring A. M. Specimen) Juneau Phone 477 estate of J. A. Smith, of 117} ve piece of land valued at $100, |« e e 20 YEARS AGO JANUARY 21, 1930 Accommodations at the Tenakee Hot Springs weer still to be had, { despite rumors (o the contrary, according to word received from Ed | Snyder, storekeeper at the resort. “Somebody has been circulating a | report that we are all filled up out here,” Snyder had complained to Purser Bahrt of the Margnita. “You tell them they're all wet. We can take care of anybody that comes from THE EMPIRE | The first Council of Honor ever held in connection with local Bey | Scout work would convene the following month, it was announced by H. L. Redlingshafer, District Commissioner. Another February event was to be the annual Father-Son banquet in which each troop was to put lon a stunt. Harry Stonehouse was in charge of Troop No. 1, th> Rev. Harry Allen of Troop 2 and Harry Douglas, Troop 3. | Paul Decker staff, of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company en- sineering returned with his bride, the former Lenora Hinkle i hom he married in Carbondale, Colo.,, December 26. The couple had {toured the East on their honeymoon, visiting the bridegroom’s parents in | jille, Ind., before coming north. The Deckers were to live in the get Apartments. Evans Nu W. P. Scott was to be chairman of the Juneaun Parent-Teachers’ Association dafice the last of January. The Coast Guard cutter Unalga had hit a submerged reef between { Sound Island and Olga Point, Kruzof Island, and sent a signai that | she had struck. The Unalga, apparently undamaged, floated about an }lmm later, and proceeded on her patrol of Southeast Alaska under command of Lt. N. S. Haugen. Weather: High, 27; low, 17; clear. o : é i i Daily Lessons in English % 1. corbox ? i | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “We're having friends for | dinner.” Say, “We're having friends AT dinner.” | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Roue (a debauche or rake). ! nounce roo-a, OO as in ROOT, A as in ATE, accent second syllable. | OFTEN MISSPELLED: Pumpkin; observe the MP. i SYNONYMS: Beginning, start, commencement, outset, incipience. | WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | STABILIZE; to make steadfast or firm. (Pronounce first syllable STAY). Such a movement will have a tendency to stabilize the whole world.” | % ) Pro- inception, 53 MODERN ETIQUETTE %% nerrs 1as | Q. If a guest shows no sign of pleasure, and does not even properly ‘Lh;\nk his hostess, is there any good way to make him see how he stands in the estimation of his hostess? A. Just about the best way to meet this situation is not to invite him again soon — or ever! | Q. If a girl is sitting out a dance with a man and is away from the | dance floor, is it all right for another man to ask the girl to dance? A. No; he should wait until she is dancing again. Q. Is it all right for a man. in the rear seat of a car with two women, to sit between them? A. Yes; this is the proper place for him to sit. LOOK and LEAR 1. What South American city is situated on the Equator? A C. GORDON SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 19:- KODIAK BARTENDER JUST TENDS BAR, WON'T SHOOT B'AR SEATTLE, Jan. 21—(@—Lynn Markham, who claims that more Kodiak b'ars have been shot over his Kodiak bar than in all the rest of the Alaskan island, was in Seattle yesterday with a recipe for sugar-cured salmon and a yen for 1 warmer clime. Markham, proprietor of Kodiak's Montmarte Inn, famed Alaskan odge for grizzly hunters, drove to Zeattle from Anchorage — 3,057/ over snowclad roads. And I didn't have to put on my chains until I hit £noqualmie Pass,” he pointed out. “T figured zeattle would be nice and warm, but now I've got to go to Cmmmm o get some warm weath Markham said the American part of the Alaska Highway is in ex- cellent condition now. The Cana- dian section is not as well main- tained “Thy the hig weather is so cold along hway that the snow is packed hard, like sand,” he explained. “You an travel along at 70 mfles an hour and if yeu have to hit the brakes you won't skid a i # Coldest temperature during the| trip was 68 degrees below zero at the Coal river, he said. With gaso- line, food and lodgings available at least every 100 miles, he encoun- tered no trouble at all. Markham, whose own lodge headquarters for hunters who visit Kodiak, doesn't hunt the big grizzlies himself. “Why should I?" he shrugged. I hear those bears shot this way and that way and every other y at is my bar every day and every night. His recipe for suger-cured sal- mon is a secret. A special Mont- marte delicacy, rext year after M'nkh'\m builds -a TWO MEN FINED FOR NTON GAME KILLING' Two residents of Fairbanks charged by Fish and Wildlife Ser-| vice officials with wanton destruc- tion and waste cf game, were fined $350 each and sentenced to 90 days in jail, suspended, according to a wire received teday by Dan Rals- ton, acting Wildlife Service head.| Det the Juneau office shortly. s were expected to arrive in Names of the men were Urban Rahoi and; Francis Br udcnck e Brownie's Liquor Store Phone 163 139 Bo. Frankiin P. O. Box 259 ) [ s e g Widest Sclection of - LIGUORS PHONE 399 The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery g Phone 704 2. What insect is known for the nests it builds of paper attached | to bushes, trees, and roofs of houses? 3. Who succeeded Moses as leader of the children of Israel? 4. What part of a building is the facade? 5. In what opera is the famous “Anvil Chorus” sung? ANSWERS: 1. Quito Ecuador. 2. The wasp. 3. Joshua. 4. The external face of a building, especially the principal front. 5. “Il Trovatore,” by Verdi. ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:00 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1950 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS LESLIE SWANSON as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “ATLANTIS" Federal 1ux —12c—Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phone 22 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH 'THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 ’ ’ Casler’s Men's Wear Formerly SABIN'S Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes BSkyway Luggage BOTANY "500" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men R. W. COWLING COMPANY DeSoto—Dodge Trucks ————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— ———————————————————————————————— it it is to be marketed | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 1 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month In Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. Carson A. Lawrence, Worshipful Master; | JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. e . | | € B.P.0.ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come. F. DEWEY BAKER, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Becretary. BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone 772 High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Store Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor—JOHN LADELY Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN "The Rexall Store"” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical nstruments and Supplies .Phone 206 ..Second and Seward.. GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Puone 549 Fred W. Wenadt Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O PHONE 556 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS —— OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by ‘Satistied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street | . MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Daries, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS —_—_———————————— for Boys SHAFFER'S “Say It With Flo SANITARY MEAT || 371" Wine oot FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Juneau Florisis FPhone 311 “ o O L ID a f o | }-h’r-:&é|§ I N-r. R by - et LR 2% RED YV e

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