The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 19, 1950, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Your Deposits ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS o DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. safety of depositors’ funds i our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 3 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to s maximum of $5,000. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Anotner CLIPPER’ EXTRA- Scpenions, G- Hia! P The Clippers %have been flying the Alaskan skyways for ...carried nearly two hundred thousand passengers fi Our flight crews know their routes UN a2t know how years C to make you comfortable For dependable Clipper service, call ... BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 i ™ vy AUV AHERICAN: [ Worio Atewars \ 7 *Trade Mark, Pan American Airways, Inc. TO SEATTLE ¢ HAWAIl * ROUND-THE-\VORLD * KETCHIKAN JUNEAU * WHITEHORSE * MAIREANKS * NOME THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ' THESE DAYS | --BY-- GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY Clement M. Hull, ‘writing to the | Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegram, complains about me on the grounds |that T said that to sin publcly |is worse than to sin in secret. Mr. Hull cannot go along with | what seems to be an encouragement | to hypocrisy. He says: J “, . . Progressive moralists try to | deal with evil by digging it out of its hiding places and looking it | square in the eye. This results in | such things as campaigns against | syphilis, campaigns for better re-: }!orm schools, Spiritual illness is | treated by educators and psychol- | ogists much in the same way as | psychological disorders are treated | by psychiatrists and physical dis- jorders are treated by physicians. |Less and less do we try to hush- hush and less and less do we blame and condemn . . ." In the first two decades Twentieth Century, many hoped that frankness might make a bet- ter world. We had been reading Ibsen and Shaw, Wells and Brieux; of the Havelock Ellis We had been fed Preserved Smith and the theology of Higher-Criticism. Tolstoy, Dos- teievsky and Gorky had come into our lives. We knew truth and we understood progress. Well, take the perspective oi 1950, What of progress! Most of l 1. Advertised vice is encouraged vice. If all the world pointed to two suicides that happened in re- cent Weeks as ego-worship, not to be admired—it might be of some ‘benem_ Instead all parties to the |suicides, which grew out of sex- |t=1k, involving divorce, were ro- manticized in the press. In fact, fall these parties | ncnentities; yet they were: held il‘.:(ore yoith as important people. | 2. Advertised indecency often is ndcned indecency. In fact, in e Ingrid Bergman situation, much |of it was press-agented and en- couraged by gossips who specialize in vice, 3. Radio, television and motion pictures, aided by the press, have | glamcrized nobodies into celebri- Ities whom children worship, It is f{all synthetic to make money. The | heroes of our children are no long- er the great of our history but| the small fry of today’s advertis- 'ing and publicity agents’ necessity. Unfcrtunately even politicians, cler- }gymen, professors in universities jand a few newspapermen compete happen to be| | yearly program, the League made LEAGUE, WOMEN VOTERS PLANNING YEAR'S PROGRAM 'Donna Lois Peyton | Is Easter Bride of pld Ensign Manion, USN Mrs. Ernes Gruening entertained | The memory of walking down the | aisle of the church with his daugh- ter at her marriage on Easter Sun- day is probably the most pleasant in Edward Peyton's recollection. Mr. Peyton returned Friday after a trip south to be present at the wedding of his daughter, Donna Lois Peyton, to Ensign Vince Man- ion, USN, in Port Angeles, Wash. The bride and bridegroom met in Juneau last summer when Miss| Peyton was here visiting her father and Ensign Manion was on an Alaska trip aboard the USS Pasa- dena. The wedding Easter Sunday was in the Port Angeles Lutheran Church. Present from their hbme in Hawthorne, California, were Ensign Manion’s mother, sister and brother. Almost as proud of his three sons, | the members of the Juneau League of Women Voters for luncheon in the Governor’s House last Saturday. | The annual meeting followed a de- |lightful luncheon. The reports of the secretary .d treasurer were read and accepted, as were the reports of the stand- ing committees. As part of its a study of national, territorial and city problems by using published material and also by gathering in- formation by actual contact with organizations and departments in- volved. Some of the subjects cov- ered were: a city survey; an edu- cation and local government sur- vey; the city elections; a Get-Out- The-Vote Campaign; a candidate survey regarding the stand of the with them for publicity and cheap- en themselyes and our lives. Of course, none of us are para- we had read Krafft-Ebing and|gons of virtue. But do we have to Study of the progress of the United show our children our worst sides? iIs there nothing good we can show them? Is only dirt the reality of life? 44 ARRIVE HERE ON| ushers at the wedding, as he was ot the bride, Mr. Peyton said that it was the first time he had seen them all together since before the war in which all three served with dis- tinction. The Peyton sons are Rob- ert, who lives in Seattle, Everett of Port Angeles and Ralph of Kelso. A reception in the Flamingo Room of the Lee Hotel followed the wedding ceremony. Ensign and ndividual candidates on local prob- lems; the International Trade Or- zation of the United Nations; N Vations; the building of world sec- ity; a Federal tax survey; and > city audit or local tax study. As a result of the activities of the League during the past year he Naticnal Board of the League »f Women Voters has voted to dis- the Junior the world—all of it from the Riv- |er Elbe to the Pacific—is altogether | without freedom or progress. It has all turned back to a rigid Feudalistic enslavement of man. As I come to think of it, I was in one of the first strikes for BARANOF;20 DEPART The northbound Baranof arrived jhere at 9:30 o'clock last night and, | after 44 persons had disembarked academic freedom, It was so long| ere and 20 had embarked, it de- ago. Willlam Howard Tat, Presi- | Parted at 5:30 am. today for Cor- dent of the United States, had |90V and Seward. attacked Charles A. Beard, our| Arriving from Seattle were: R. professor of politics, who had writ- | A28aard, Kenfield Bailey, Jean F. ten a small book, “Economic Il_l_lBeckex-. Cecelia E. Buser, Florence | terpretation ' of the Constitution.” | ©arison, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Car- We feared that President Nicholas|D¢gie, Mrs. Jane Dillard, F, L. Murray Butler was going to fire Flanagan, Mrs. Lena Freitag, John Beard flom Columbia. We went Hasmeir, Mrs. W. Holbrook. on strike for academic freedom. | Don M.Hance, Emil Hietala, Lou- How fresh was the air we|San Krause, Mr. and Mrs. Jack | breathed! Mind you, T was brought Kristan, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mos- up in the slums of New York— | her, F. Olson, E. A. Patton, Mr. |but we did not, as children, en-|and Mrs. M. Stiles, Mrs. Pearl counter pansies, fairies, homosex- | Smith and Irene Smolder. uals and our mothers did not wor-| From Ketchikan: Ray Cava- ry about the corruption of our sis- | Daugh, Mrs. E. D. Freeman, Mr. and ters by Lesbian school-teachers. |Mrs. L. Hopkins, J. K. Johnson, Sure! All things happened that Mrs. Helen Keene, Donald D. Mc- have been happening since Lot’s| Feeley, Fritz Peterson, Willy Ness, wife was turned into a Pillar of | Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Simmons, and Salt, but we grew up with the law | Mrs. Florence Thornton, of the sidewalk that a liar d= From Wrangell: Mrs. Joe Her- served a punch on the nose and nandez, Mrs. Lee Lucas, Linda Lee got it; and that a thief landed in|Lucas, John Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. | jail; that a judge was expected to R. Sharnbroich, and Terry Sharn- | be straight; that the President of |broich. | the United States was a gentleman | Leaving for Cordova were: George |to be emulated, eyen if it was|A. Madden, Diego Baulino, Mr. and ‘tough to try to be like him. We | Mrs. Edmund Sweeney, and Marcus were taught to respect our parents,| Carlson; and for Seward: G. S. to be ashamed of our wrong-doing, | Clark, Leonard J. ‘Williamson, Mr. to confess when caught and to cry | and Mrs. Wallace M. Porter, Mrs. and ask for forgiveness. | Nina Crumnine, Josephine Crum- My mother lived to be well past! nine, John Weil, Tom ‘Weil, U. 80 and she never understood my | Velek, M. J. Winninghoff, Mrs. Roy way of life, which was very differ- | Avrit, T. J. Pyle, Robert C. Car- ent from hers. But I never lied| lisle, W. T. Mahoney and Matt to her—not once. It was just some- | Morgan. 2 thing that could not be done. 1 So, when Mr Hull makes the| point about bringing everything“ out in public, he misses several| From Fort Richardson, Delbert things about human nature which E. Blair is registered at the Bara- the ancient moralists understood nof. only too well | FROM FORT RICHARDSON VOTE FOR VOTE FOR Waino E. Hendrickson Juneau, Alaska w Alaska Born and Alaska Booster i% Republican Candidate HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES For Firsi Division MARCUS F. JENSEN, of Douglas, Demo. Candidate to House of Representatives, Primaries, April 25. FOR HONEST AND EFFI- CIENT GOVERNMENT. 797t UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management Land Office i Anchorage, Alaska. | February 3, 1950. | ' NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION | Notice is hereby given that Fred James Fletcher, entryman, of Ju- neau, Alaska, and his witnesses Rob- ! ert H. Burns of Juneau, and George R. Betts of Hoonah, Alaska, has | made final preof on Homestead Ad- | ditional, Anchorage Serial 010031, for {the land embraced in Forest List |10-5, HE. 8. No. 249, containing 11.39 acres, situate in the Tongass National Forest on Port Frederick, Chichagof Island southwest of and adjoining Homestead entry Survey | No. 131, and it is now in the files \of the Land Office, Anchorage, Al- laska, and if no protest is filed in \the local land office, at Anchorage, within the period of publication or | thirty days thereafter, said final | proof will be accepted and final cer- | tificate issued. GEORGE. A. LINGO, Manager. First publication, March 1, 1950. Last publication, April 26, 1950. PAY Mayor of Juneau 4th Term continue regarding League as provisional and has rec- oznized it as a full-fledged local league. There was a discussion of the special election regarding the Territorial Building and the ques- tions raised by the guests indicated that the public might be interested in further information as to who may vote and the issues involved. - Mrs. Manion will live at Haw- thorne. Mr. Peyton, who is with the; Alaska Electric Light and Power Company in Juneau, did buying for his company while he was on his two weeks trip south. FOR SALE Miss Kay Hackwood, Radio Chal™ man, reported on her activitieis for the year and thanked those mem- pers who assisted in presenting the radio material. The coming year promises to be of even greater interest to the listening public. The proposed program for 1950~ 1951 was presented and the follow- ing agenda adopted: LOCAL: ‘Study of expenditures of the city government and pre- sentation of an easily understood statement; education of the com- munity to support’an adequate child welfare program for Juneau; and representation of League mem- kership at Council meetings. TERRITORIAL: Study of forms of government in the Territory; support of adequate appropriations for Health, Welfare, and Education; Support of a basic tax program and study for strengthening such a tax program and eliminating loopholes. NATIONAL: Expanding world trade’ and international economic development, as essential steps to- ward a strong United Nations; An understanding of the federal FORD V-8 sedan, 30,000 mi. Body S g S O R R S WURLITZER Spinit piano for rent AN APARTMENT for Peggy—She No rust, motor ex- $550.00 81-4t near perfect. cellent, new 6-ply tires. Phone 721. 2% ACRES, 4 rms. and bath, fire- place, 650 ft. beach. See Robert Parker 2 miles North of Douglas Bridge 81-3t DOWNTOWN waterfront property, reasonably priced. Inquire at S'N'T Clothing Store, 177 S.! Franklin. 81-6t | ALUMINUM Double Tub, daven- port, matching chair, reasonable. Call Black 447 anytime 8 am. to 10 p.m. 80-2¢ Andersou Plano S.co. Ph. s to live. rooms. 82-tf a place compact LOOKING for Three smell Phone 817 WANTERD Call 82-1t iis Young and Beautiful. Gr. 91 after 7 p.m. budget in relation to a stable and axpanding economy; the examina- tion of conservation programs to illustrate the effect of government expenditures and administrative efficiency on the economy of the United States; support of redrgan- iization measures for improved ad- ministratien of conservation pro- grams; A constitutional amendment to improve the method of election of the President and Vice presi- dent of the United States. The nomiinating committee pre- sented its slate of officers for the coming year as follows: Mrs, Les- lie B. Avrit as Vice-President; Mrs. G. D. Jermain, as Treasurer; ahd the following as Board members: Mrs. Frank Metcalf, Miss Sadie Billis, Miss Katherine Hackwood, and Miss Priscilla Parker. These officers were elected by unanimous vote. The President, Mrs. Ernest Gruening, and the Secretary, Miss | Ruth M. Rogall, will continue in office. It was decided that a Can-, didates’ Meeting would be held on Monday, April 24, at 8 o'clock, in the Grade School auditorium, at which time candidates for the com- ing primary election will be given the opportunity to present their views on certain subjects of vital nterest to the community. Plans for a membership tea are under way and will be announced shortly. ELKS ATTENTION The regular meeting of Juneau Lodge No. 420, B. P .O. Elks will be held THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 20th, at eight o'clock. There will be a visiting delegation of Officers and Members of Skag- way Lodge No. 431, and an initia- tion will be conducted by their degree team. All Elks are urged to attend. There will be a feed. SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSEN'S | pXe (Paid advertisement) SICKS’ SEATTLE BREWING & MALTIN: | EXTRA PALE G CO., SEATTLE, U.$.A. - Unit of One of LOST—Nugget butterfly pin, Alaska — BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY—Man- land 20, Calif TEMPORARY housing in country Re- 82-4t Jade setting (green stone). ward. Black 920. ager of Company doing Inter- naticnal busjness will be in Alaska in near future to arrange exclusive dealership for big line direct selling household and farm supplies. Car and small invest- ment needed. Experience not required to start. Write for pre- liminary information and ap- pointment, Give full information about yourself first letter. H. B. Bennett, Care Rawleighs, Oak- 82-1t for female Labrador for three months while whelping. Wwill give one pure bred puppy for care. Ph. 971 + BABY SITTING, week ends only. Best references. Ph, Black 810. 82-3t APARTMENT wanted for Alaska Coastal employee and wife. Write Empire C 1788. 8-6t WHY PAY contractor’s prices? Re- roof with aluminum shingles at actual cost. Warde A. Johnson. Ph. 81. 66-1mo el ¢ A R BRI T EMPLOYED couple and one child need apt. or house in Juneau or Douglas. Ph.~Douglas 145. 6-4t P e SRR S o NG o1 DAY NURSERY—Mothers care fo your small child. Mrs. Wm, Pas- sey. Ph. 938. 406-t1 FOR RENT R e o STEAMHEATED Rooms, weekly or Monthly. Colonial Rooms, 68t Knitting, fishing, sheep-herding and farming are the industries of the Shetland Islands. BTk BEER WE FOR SALE DOUGLAS: ALMOST NEW 3-bedroom home; beautiful view; hardwood floors, garage. BUILDING suitable for business and apartment combined; center of business district. NEW, F.H.A. financed, 2-bedroom home; unfurnished. 2-BEDROOM furnished; full con- crete foundation; near bus facil- ities. JUNEAU: | $3,750 takes small, 2-bedroom home, completely furnished. $7,500—1-bedroom home beautifully furnished; excellent view. 2-BEDROOM home adjacent to small boat harbor; furnished. BEACH PROPERTY: Well constructed, completely fur- nished beach cabin; wonderful view. ACREAGE: About 8 miles from house. BOATS: 26-foot cabin cruiser; new Chrysler | 110 Crown motor; sell or tradei Juneau, good for car or beach property. THE CLARICE—can be seen for few days at small boat harbor. MURPHY & MURPHY REALTORS - ACCOUNTANTS 2hone 676 over Frist National Bank FOR SALE ‘ 1-15 gal. Schaefer Ice cream re- ! frigerator. 1-Glass top 150 qt.' Ice cream refrigerator. Both at reduced prices. Ph. 971. 82-6t, NORGE WASHER, practically new ' must_sacrifice, $60.00. Call Blue 740 days. 82-3t | l 1 BOAT, “VALKYRIE” and misc. boat equipment. See Robert | Churchill, Admin. Estate of Os- car H. Wood, deceased, or attor- | ney Howard D. Stabler. 82-8! 1947 HUDSON sedan, new paint,| good running condition. $700.00 " Box 849 or cali 14 after 7:00 p.m. 82-2t 1 UNIV. MARINE ENG. used 2 seasons, 25 H. P. with 2% reduc- tion, $300. 2 6-volt batteries, $10 each. 1 Northill anchor with 6 fathoms % chain and 18 fath- oms Manila line, $30. 150 ft steel{ trelling line, $15. Inquire care- taker at Shrine Island, Mile 24, Glacier Highway. 81-6t TRANSFER BUSINESS, includes; 1 G.MC. Pick-up Truck, 1 Inter- national, 1 %-ton Truck, and 1 Dodge Dump Truck. For in- formation write to Box 27| Haines, Alaska. 81-6t REA BUILDING at Auke Lake will be sold to the highest bid- | der for cash at 2 p.m. saturday.‘ April 22, 1950. Sale to be held ! on the premises and successful bidder will be required to remove structure and clean up within 30 days. 81-4t ACCORDION—TIuprani 120 Bass, will sell $135. Red 690 80-6t GOQD VIEW HOUSE with small apt. 3 lots, reasonably priced. Write Empire C 791. 80-tf 4 ROOM npartically furn. house 3:4 acres pat land Auk Bay. Jake Hendricks, 80-tf FOR SALE OR LEASE: 105 ft. Pcwer Barge. For information Air-Mail Power Barge—Box 927 Anchorage, Alaska. 80-3t DON'T BUY a sales talk. Reroof with beautiful aluminium shingles at actual cost of material and labor—Warde A. Johnson, Ph. 81. HIGHWAY home, Mile 16. Make offer. Ph. 707. 62-tf TWO BEDROOM home. Well fur. recently refinished inside and out. Reasonable—Call Douglas 232 78-6¢ KNOCK DOWN FREEZER, 12 ft by 16 ft., York Machine. $500. down, balance monthly. George Bros. 77-12¢ 1 BARBER CHAIR, 1 wash bowl, Inquire Smiley’s Pool Hall. 74-1mo. 1940 5 PASSENGER Chevrolet con- vertible, radio, heater, good con- dition. Call Red 904. 72-t1 CRESENT Apartments. Call 428 68-t! 1948 GMC % ton pickup, 4 speed transmission, 8 ply tires, 8 ft bed, deluxe cab, must go. Make offer. Ph. 707. 56-t1 SEVERAL large ana Small Dia- monds. Perfect stones. Bargalr prices at the First Nationa! Bank. Bu LARGE SIZE Lang restaurant range. Contact Cleo Comers at City Dock. 460-t1 DNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950 W-A-N-T A-D-S FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM—1 year old. Pri- vately built home on Behrends i: Ave. Unfurnished but with full electric kitchen equipment. Fire- place Medium priced. Terms. BUILDING LOTS—Cedar tract and 4 the highlands. A good choice is still available. , APARTMENT HOUSES—8 to 4 units. A financlal is available to responsible parties showing in- vestment return on these prop- erties, William Winn-Phone 234 lv; Office in Alaska Credit Bureau T A U o R SR NEW LISTINGS—Seatter Tract, two houses, $12,000: for both. Front house 3 , living- room, diningroom, backporch, large kitchen. House in rear has 2 apartments, 2 bed- room and one bedroom. Beau- tiful view. Income from all three $150. Move into any part and let the property buy itself. NEW LISTING—920 12th St. Two houses, one bedroom each. Part- ly filled. Good business location or home, between new school site and planned shopping $6,000., NEW PRICE—2 mi. Glacier High- remodeled, furnished, “basement way, 2 bedrooms, floor furnade, large yard on beach. $6,500. Terms. NEW TERMS—$1,500 down, $100 month, takes $6,800 house Basin Road. Full basement, four bed- rooms, view. Owner finance. h at KENNEDY—3 bedroom, 2 children’s play rooms separate, large livingrcom, diningroom, din- . ette. An old fashioned, comfort- able house, swings and sandpile & for kids. Across street from pub- lic playground. 2 blocks from hospital, 4 blocks from schools. View of harbor. $8,600. VERY SMALL one person house, Basin Road. $2,250 cash or $2,- 350 terms. SUMMER CABIN with beach, Lena Cove, $2400. BEACH HOME, fireplace, 2 bed- rooms, basement, large ynrd." workshcp, modern kitchen ang = bath. Make offer. ELFIN COVE, 4 rooms, dock, $1,400, DOUGLAS PLAYGROUND, remod- 6t eled Spruce Corp. house, 2 bed- _._. rooms, livingroom, kitchen, bath, storm windows. Nice bright little house for only $4,500. 1948 HUDSON COMMODORE, 4 door Sedan, cost $2983. 5 mew tires, new upholstery, new paint, new valves, springs and guides. Trans. and clutch overhauled. $1,- 425, this week only. J 36 FOOT TROLLER, 9 ft. beam, double ender, 30 Palmer en- gine. ONLY $2,500 for quick sale —owner has job in Anchorage waiting. SMALL HOUSE to be moved. 10x12 suitable for short batchelor or tall kid. Can be moved on truck $75. NEW MAYTAG, new THOR wash- ing machines; new EUREKA vac- uum cleaner; new QUAKER and DUO THERM ranges; ALL SIZ- ES WINDOWS, DOORS, BATH ‘TUBS. CHARCOAL BROILER for 8 steaks ideal for summer cabin or home or restaurant. $175. PETER WOOD SALES AGENCY SEWARD AT MARINE WAY ‘Telephone 911. WANTED BABIES and small children cared for in my home, day, week or month. Call Black 212. 81-5t COAST GUARD officer, wife and two children. Desire to rent fur- nished or unfurnished apt. or house, occupancy June 15th. Call. Blue 954. 80-tf COMPETENT STENOGRAPHER in private business office. Best hours and pay. Write Box 797 Empire, giving age and qualifi- cations. 80-4t YOUNG COUPLE ' urgently need furn. apt. or house. Krasilovsky 123 after 6. 80-6t 4 MISCELLANEOUS “THE BAHA'I faith is not an in- vitation to a new religion; it is a call to religious unity.” For lit- erature Box 992 Mountain View, Alaska. GUARANTEED Realistic Perman- 3 ent, $7.50. Paper curls $1 up Lola’s Beauty Shop, Phone 201 315 Decker Way. WINTER and POND, Co,, Inc. Complete photographic Supplies Developing-Printing-Enlarging Artists’ Paints and Materials Blue Printing - Photostats M. S. RELTANCE, 52 ft. motor sail- er, diesel powered. See at end float No. 1, small boat harbor, 11% FLAT BOTTOM red cedar skiff with oars $45.00. Write Box 2353 or phone 38 6-tf the Worlds Great Brewing Orgesiset new. Ph, Douglas 343, 69-tt ONE INNER spring mattress, like | LOST AND FOUND FOUND—1 brass key, owner may have same by identifying and paying for adv. FOUND—Bracelet, owner may claim same by identifying and | paying for adv, v 5 e 8 sunporch, %% ‘) m— center.

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