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PAGE FOUR Dall Alaska Empire Juneau, Alasks | noo in Evergreen in wa President . dent | ; - Entered in the Po v nd Ciass Matter. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Dovias for S150 per mentd ‘ six months. $8.08 - £ advance. $7.50 1 602 ws_Office MEMBER OF A n Brig. Gen. touched, for NO ISSUE OF EMPIRE MAY 30 1 There no issue of The Daily Alaska Empire | tomorros worial Day, but any important news br be bulletined in the windows. \lh'\l()“l \l DAY ) Unhappily, Tomorrow is Memorial nny, The day ongmamd with th aside of the one day as especially sacred to the memories | comrades whom they left behind, when they | d to the places which they had left to answer | all of their country Since then the day has been observed in memory of those who made the supreme sacrifice. On this one day let sincerity of spirit prevail. la lot of us In Juneau, there will be services tomorrow fore- | advice! | pace buy. war broke. Or as late as 1946, our delegates The Washingfon ) writing 3 a s Merry-Go-Round I et o ) - right of “veto.” (Continued from Page One) But time has moved so swiftly, | - Ithe weapons of war have developed ter. T vividly|SO gruesomely that, in the five Indians in the |Short years between 1945 and 1950, , we changed |MOost of us regret that last remain- City, and that|ng vestige of isolation—the veto. c who owned one of the| Y¥es, this.is the age of fear—and s in Ottawa, Kan-|i€8r is a bad master. l‘L is an age when we spend our time looking about dhan'““d“ the bed for spies instead of looking ahead; when politicidns fulminate about past mistakes in- stead of striving to prevent future mistakes,, This is centrate nor ast, you can your car against the ntesm-@ttawa, while even have to worry or “stacking” air- a; age when we con- things military until Ithere is real worry we may go | bankrupt, though the state of the {world is fear, and fear is psychol- an on Mec jes of Man's Destruction jogical—for which milita: might Durir tne past 13 years the|C8n bring no permanent cure, complications of life have acceler- et ated faster an during the pre- Removing Fear 2 ceding hundred. Especially in the| If we could remove fear from the| past 10 years we have accelerated|minds of men, our problems would the mechanics of human destruc-|pe over. If we could especially tion, remove the fear that has been In fact, T would say this was the | carefully nurtured in the minds of most distinctive feature of our|the Russian people—fear against cus decade, and that we arelys which their Moscow masters now at a turning point where man | want them to have—then our own to live with himself {fear wculd al-o vanish. So also ing about his own des-}would vanish our need for back- mament. i breaking But what our leaders do not realize today, but which I hope you developed gases ving maniacs out of oping their lust to kill. devised germs which can ered over an enemy country of tubes, spreading ng cattle, rust among virus among humans. have learned long before 2000, is that if we spent one-tenth the in- genuity we put into developing weapons of death, ways of smuggling the into “thoughts” curtain, devising be- hind iron our fears have invented rockets which, | might then be over. when fired into the ¢ 00t not| As you in 2000 look back on us, in a ciraight line, but c their |you will decide that this is basic- course with uncanny ¥ tolally a “thought” war. One side catch up with a speeding airplane.|has been especially successful in And nave developed bombs Our side spreading “thoughts.” hasn’t. Yes, war first, > developed quite |germ and atom war later. are now convulsed will probably never become a war T of bullets, tanks, cannon, because TR the armies of the future won't get close enough. Yet we are still devastate cities almost this is a “thought” though it may become a And it The Age of Fear ¥ that as you in the|spending our tax money on these year 2000 look back on the vear old-fashioned weapons. 1950 you will probably describe it' T hope by the time you read this as the age of fear. And you will you will be able to say “How probably also say that fear is a|foolish those poor dubs were back € " in 1950." I hope that by 2000 you in 1950 that we really|long ago will have dispelled the from our sublime isola-|age of fear. I hope you will have of us alive today re-|found a to carry out what 10w ie Senate killed Wood-|we in our hearts know is the Wilson's League of Nations, | answer—that men must know efich believed we could re- | other, live together, work together. recall how at| I hope you not only have profited al conference of | from our mistakes but also have | i nists would not|had the ingenuity to carry that even let H L. Stimson sign an | principle beyond the iron curtain. agrec before a For if man is to drive away that “consult” PAT MURPHY as a paid-up subscriber v THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE receive TWO TICKETS to see: “LUST FOR GOLD" Federal Tux—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! and in the Elks Hall, St e who relish seeing the full book thown at t only the minimum. 1 was only the smallest of small fry. s mfluenc(\ real and imagined, and traded t he could call a President ;md a presi- 3 aide by a familiar “H use he did the peddling and trading, but ed about it to a Senate committee, he should be punished. But it's right, too, punishment shouldn't be severe, because he 1 in such small stuff and because so Ynany of the operators go unscathed. Harry Vaughan, who gave Maragon what little backing there was for his front, instance; House. an intimate of the President. ,"5 per centers” who were so much bigger than Maragon Vever pretended to be, as well as the really big-time ! behind-scenes lobbyists—they're untouched too. It's a strange net the government has, quite the i reverse of usual ones, for it catches the small fish and lets the big ones go. Don’t Drive Us boys of '61 who deemed it appropriate to set i American coffee-producing countries tion for their work.” It is the Minister's contention that the,increase of coffee prices in the United States has not kept with the price ‘f,uturcd goods which the Latin-American countries Mebbe so, mebbe so, are going and other respects paid to Maragon’s Sentence Louis Star-Times) ifender, the sentence imposed on probably seem inadequate. This 1ddy of men in high White House minimum on his conviction on two eight months to two years. It's vy punishment. will be quite content that For the obvious fact though, Harry.” Caught it's is un- he serves still in the White And the other To It (Cleveland Plain Dealer) we observe that Colombia’s Minister of Finance advocates an even higher price for coffee in the United States in order to yield the Latin- “just compensa- increases in American manu- but if cofffee goes any higher to start taking our doctor's [ 5 | mad master, fear, and if he is to attain the peace he hungers for, then somehow he must persuade the world to return to the great commandment, “love thy neighbor as thyself.” I hope that, by the time you read this, mankind will have learned that lesson. COMMUNITY EVENTS At 6 p.m.—Dance by Rainbow Girls at Scottish Rite Temple to tive visiting officials following conter- ring of initiatory degrees. At 8 pm—~VFW Banquet at Mikes. At 8 p.m.—American Legion, Dug- out. May 30 (At 10:30 a.m.—Memorial Day exer- cises at Elks Hall followed by parade to dock and cemetery. At 2:30 p.m.—Baseball game be- tween Douglas and Coast Guard teams. May 31- At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof. At 7 p.m.—Girls’ Softball teams to meet in Evergreen Bowl. At 8 pm.—VFW Auxiliary meets in CIO Hall. At 8 p.m.—Majority service Rain- bow Girls, Scottish Rite Temple, followed by grand ball honoring visiting officials. At 8 pm.—AWVS meeting at Gov- ernor’s House. June 1 At noon—Chamber of Commerce, Baranof. At 6:30 p.m.—Juneau Rifle and Pis- tol Club, Mendenhall Range. At 8 pm.—Women of Moose meets Moose Hall. June 2 At 10:30 a.m. — Martha Society leave N.L.P. Church for annual picnic. June 5 At noon—Lions Club, Baranof. June 6 At noon—Rotary Club, Baranof. No Emblem Club dril team meet- ing on Decoration Day—May 30. flowers are to be cast upon the! | waters of Gastineau Channel, graves will be decorated Cemetery. those who passed on during conflicts, those who fell , those who died in defense of American ideals. i H MAY 29 George A. Parks Angelo F. Ghiglione Katherine Mack Art Hedges Miriam Lowe Marilyn Jackson Esther Martinsen Lynn Jackson | MAY 30 Crystal Jenne Frank W. Heinke Ed Jahoda Diana Bost David Harman Mrs. William R. Weir e o o o o ELKS WIN SEASON OPENER FROM MOOSE The Gastineau Channel Baseball League season officially opened yes- terday afternoon before a large at- tendance with the Elks taking full advantage of a wild error-filled sec- ond inning by the Moose to win 14 to 4, although outhit 11 to 12. For the Elks, Smithberg showed | brilliant pitching in striking out 14| batters without giving up a free ticket to first. For the Moose, start- ing pitcher Magorty issued four| walks in his two inning stint; re- lieving pitcher Shepherd struck out; nine while issuing six walks, three| of which came in the ninth. The only home run of the game and the first score for the Moose | came in the third inning by McCagg with no one on base. A near home run was snared by Magorty off a hard hit ball by Snow in the eighth | with the bases empty. Following are the statistics of the game: Elks al Houston, ¢ . Logan, 1f - Forsythe, 2b Snow, 1b Cope, cf Trump, ss Day, 3b xPidgeon, rf Smithberg, p Totals 5 xHazlett in fifth. Moopse: xShepherd, ¢ xxMagorty, p Sanford, 1b Pasquan, 2b Phelps, ss . xxxHaen, 3b Pinkerton, 1f . Mann, rf peiis xxxxAutten, cf ... Totals ... S xMcCagg in third inning. xxShepherd in third inning. | xxxMiller in ninth inning. °* xxxxMagorty in third .Inning. Runs by Innings Elks 1...290 000 012— 14 Moose . ...001 030 000— 4 Left on base: Elks 9, Moose 9; hit batter: Logan; strike outs: Smith- berg 14, Magorty 0, Shepherd 9; winning pitcher, Smithberg; losing pitcher, Magorty. Umpires: Wilber and Wood (Anchorage umpire-in- chief). wwS A R Bromvuwmnwnn —~moRNMNWHNNCCSS vocococororen ® Gwh s T morooocoorNn Benvmvocomuwns “ocoocrmrrolown BASEBALL TOMORROW The second game of the Gastineau Channel League will be played to= morrow at 2:30 p.m., in Firemen's Ball Park between the Coast Guard team and Douglas. No game tonight. Have your coats relined now—i'ts stored free until fall in the coldest fur vault 4n town—Martin Victor| Furs, Inc. 16-10t No Emblem Club drill team meet- ing on Decoration Day—May 30. Empire Want Ads bring results—| Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 88. Body of armed . Find S Standing . Dross of & . High Dcfl;med pstal 35. Teaching of a fable 38. Hurrying 40. Musical dramas 42, Raised . Collection platform of tacts 43. Metal U 41, Dance 48, Compass poin’ 49, A judge of sracl Inthis place 50. Learning titch Vocal com= Shrub for - Sl position 63. Winter pre- . Night befors cipitation f2i il Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle 3. Need . Dive . Adds again . Title of Mohammed . Part of a car . Locomotives DOWN 1. Automobile 2. Salutation Coax . Possessed . Prepared Artificial language . Indian weight . Pronoun g{“-melled snow . Anticipating with appre- hension 29. Comforts ression . Poultry product . Perfect golf . Quiets . Specks of dust . Think Individual performance . Measure of weight 46, HQHII!;&‘"’: comb. form 47. Not old Schools was held in the afternoon, when report cards were given out | W. E. Nowell. R. E. Robertson, H. L. Faulkner, E. M. Goddard, D. W. ! tur-jid, U as in FUR, I as in IT, accent first syllable. — HE EMPIRE MAY 29, 1930 W. S. Pullen announced that the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company boat Alma, would make the round trip to Skagway for Memorial Day celebration of the Queen’s Birthday in Whitehouse, Y. T. May 31, 1930. Large advertisements in The Empire proclaimed the weekend ex- cursions leaving May 30 and meeting the White Pass and Yukon Railroad train June 1 for the retuen, calling at Haines and Douglas. Teams from Juneau, Skagway, Chilkoot Barracks and Whitehorse were to compete in a baseball tournament. Field sports were planned, and there was to be dancing two nights in Whitehorse. Round trip fare was $15, with coffee furnished aboard. (“Bring your own lunch.”) Framed pictures and other ornaments were being put in place in the information booth of the Chamber of Commerce, located on Front Street opposite I. Goldstein’s Store, with plans for ‘full operation for the season starting June 1. The booth had been open one day only, for the Good Will Tour of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Iva Tilden was in charge. A new fur and curio store was opened on lower Front Street by W. H. Newton, oldtime Alaskan who had lived in the Territory for about 32 years. Mrs. Horace D. Plumb. formerly Selma Aalto, arrived from Seattle for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Aalto of Douglas. She had been away for five years. The last assemblage of 1929-30 for all students of the Juneau Public with grades for the entire year. Both trucks of the Juheau Fire Department were out on duty at the same time, at 11 a. m. and noon—one of the few times that two different fires were reported. Firemen were called first, at 11:15 am., from box 47 to put out a fire at the home of Donald Skuse, on Gold Creek off Twelfth Street. While the firemen were still at work there, the second call came in from box 18. Truck No. 2 was driven to the Juneau Lumber Mills, but the blaze was put out before arrival. Following a luncheon at the Glacier Highway home of Mrs. Ray Peterman, Mrs. F .A. Sanborne of Mexico City entertained at bridge on the mezzanine of the Zynda Hotel. Among the guests were Mesdames Whaely, and R, Simpson. Priezs went to Mrs. Faulkner and Mrs. ‘Whaley. Weather: High, 72; low, 48; clear. Daily Lessons in English ¥%. 1. corpoN WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, feet down the road, he looked around and waved.” BACK and waved.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Turgid (inflated; swollen). “After proceeding a few | Say, “He looked | Pronounce OFTEN MISSPELLED: Maintain (verb). Maintenance (noun); ob- serve the TEN. SYNONYMS: Praiseworthy, mable. ~“*WORD STUDY: laudable, meritorious, commendable, esti- “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: COEVAL (adjective); of the same age. CONE, E as in ME, accent second syllable). those of the secretary.” (Pronounce ko-e-val, O a sin “His writings are coeval with MODERN E”OUE"E %BERTA LEE Q. When is the proper time for the bridegroom to give the minister his wedding fee? A. The bridegroom does not give the fee to the minister personally. He should place the money or check in an envelope and give it to his best man, who will hand it to the minister following the ceremony. Q. What is the proper way to point the prongs of the fork when cu!gng food and when eating it? A. The prongs of the fork should point downwards when cutting the food, upwards when conveying it to the mouth. “®. Is it correct for parents to introduce their children to adults? A. Yes, and it is excellent training. Well-bred parents should do this at every opportunity. 1. What is the hardest, least destructible part in a human body? 2. What is the highest volcanic mountain in the world? 3. Who were the candidates in the closest Presidential race in U. 8. history, which occurred in 1876? 4. From what source does insulin come? 5. What is the bird that spends almost its entire life either in or on the water, and is never seen on land? ANSWERS: 1. The dental enamel. 2. Mount Cotopaxi, in the eastern chain of the Andes Mountains; 19,500 feet high. 3. Rutherford B. Hayes and Samuel Tilden. 4. From the pancreas glands of sheep, oxen, hogs and calves‘that are slaughtered. 5. The grebe. N EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and Franklip PHONE 5086 FOR APPOINTMENTS RTTITHTT Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1950 The B. M. Behrends | Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Weather at Alaska Points “Weather conditions and temper- atures at various Alaska points also on the Paclfic Coast, at 4:30 am., 120th Meridian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follows 1 36—Partly Cloudy Anchorage ... Annette Island 43—Drizzle Barrow 23—Snow Bethel .. 35—Cloudy Cordova 37—Pamy Cloudy Dawson . 38—Partly Cloudy Edmonton ... 46—Partly Cloudy Fairbanks 43—Cloudy Haines 47—Partly Cloudy Havre 52—Cloudy Juneau . 38—Cloudy Kodiak ......... 37—-Fartly Cloudy Kotzebue 31—Cloudy McGrath . . 44—Cloudy Nome emidion 32—Fog Northway ... 3’1—Pmly Cloudy Petersburg - . : . 42—Cloudy Portland e 51—Cloudy Prince George 40—Cloudy Seattle v 50—Drizzle Sitka .......... . 45—Partly Cloudy ‘Whitehorse . 34—Partly Cloudy Yakutat . 34—Partly Cloudy FROM KIMBERLEY, B.C. J. C. Ratcliffe of Kimberley,,B.C., arrived from Seattle yesterday by Pan American and is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. Store your furs with Charles Gold- | stein and Company, Phone 102. SCHWINN BIKES AT 3ADSEN’S e o 0 0 0 0 o o 0 TIDE TABLE MAY 30 High tide 0:15 am.,, Low tide 6:53 am.,, High tide 13:15 p.m. Low tide 18:56 p.m., 19.1 ft. =34 ft. 16.1 ft. 1.7 ft. MAY 31 High tide 1:00 am., Low tide 7:40 am High tide 14:04 p.m.,, 164 ft. Low tide 19:44 pm, 18 ft. 19.7 ft. -4.2 ft. PAINTING AND DECORATING Priced to Meet Your Budge* PHONE 996 Ralph Treffers —_——— Brownie's Liguor Store Phene 103 139 Se. Frankiia P. O. Box 2508 ) Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 399 The Erwin Feed Co. LADIES'—MISSES’’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 1% CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Mea R. W. COWLING COMPANY Dedgo—Plymeuth—Chrysier DeSoto—Dodge Trucks SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT beginning at 7:30 p. m. Carson A. Lawrence, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVEXRS, Secretary. @ B.P.0.ELKS Meeting 'evuy ‘Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers wel- come. WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. PR Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone 773 High Quality Cabinet Werk for Home, Office or Stere The Rexall Store" Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store .Phone 549 Pred W. Wends Card Beverage Co. ‘Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY er NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP The Alaskan Hotel - Newly Renovated Roome Thomas Hardware Co. 2AINTS — OILS Buflders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remi Typewri BOLD and lnvmtfiyn J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers™ | FORD A e GEN)C! GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Moior Co. Foot of Main Street JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM & daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Datries Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY PLone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phene 38 To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. S. GRAVES " The Clothing Man LEYTS OVERALLS for Boys : 3 “Say It With Flowers” “SAY IT WITH OURS FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Pree Deltvery Juneau Florists Pheme 311 “