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PAGE FOUR Dml Alaska Empire Pubmhcd every evening except Sunday by the | southern end of The Juneau, MPIRE PRINTING COMPANY § nd Maln Streets, Juneau, Alasks N. s in 1085, It KELEN mm \szEN - - - - President | ing. The origina DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - - Vice-President | | ELMER A. FRIEND - - - - Managing Editor | ghost ALFRED ZENC Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class Matter. | time, SUBSCRIPTION RATE! Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douslas for $1.50 per monthi | Nov ember 14, 194: six months, $8.00; one year, $15.00 11, postage paid, at the following r “"‘ strip of water advance $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; | tne Solomon Islar advance, $1.50. ibers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify xcrew were lost, iness Oifice of any faflure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Waterloo, Towa. Telephon . News Office, 602; Business Office, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS P of our town d Press is exclusively entitled to the use fer news dispatches credited to it or not other- | Korean s puper and also the local mews published ¢ t1a¢ che Higgins who smi navy calls esprit The bombing like a chapter out Bell Tolls.” war, The Asso republicat: credi coast” a car) NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 o irth Avenue Bldg. Seattle, Wash. we is playing Abo Hugh Joseph Foster as superin fairs in Alaska. He was born Monday, August 7, 1950 THE JUNEAU — GALLOPING GHOST OF THE l\()RL,\\ COAST and operated a c; to Formosa ¥ “Cruiser Juneau convoys tanker sea- That was a headline in The Empire Saturday. The Juneau, a 6,000-ton cruiser, began her mission in Far Eastern waters as a peacetime training ship, With the outbreak of the Korean war she became the Korean coast” according port with Mexicans a Since coming ——_— “the ghost of to galloping Magazine tells the, story of the Liom, member of Lambda political affiliatio Time Time sortie, under command | of the Juneau's executive officer, Commander W. B. Porter, to bomb the Hanjyung railroad, to catch “’\'lpl(}nll)(‘l’ 1 train, the only direct connecting line to the K‘M‘““mpulis, Ninnesota. Reds from the Russian Trans-Siberian line. “Our job ‘While we are will be to mine a railroad tunnel near the beach,” Comdr. Porter told the small group of men in his as a man. nusss frank in discussing public qu Time's reporter said “we could see o \uuv.hbuund”n_mu how much train headed for the tunnel . .. We could not hear {\w believe he hnd I'h w h ' 151>tcd he was helpless to stop e Yashingion | Spanish aid. Later, Lucas called the White House, and the Pres- Me"y-GO'Round ident, though not critical of Lucas, was most unhappy about the Fran- /Continued from Page One) co loan. However, he won't be able = to veto it without vetoing the en- tire appropriations bill, which would throw the governmental ma- chinery into turmoil. through the Se! e have expressed the private opinion that this may have be a worse setback than we suffered in Korea Sres Rus main battle is still Eloquent Opponent For tt Most eloquent opponent of aid to Franco was Morse of Oregon: “I want to say that I hate, wits all my soul and being, everything that is Communistic,” argued Morse But likewise, I hatg with an,_equal is of men lomats who express this those who have had to pout unloading U. 8. arms Antwerp, Marseilles and Am- myand Joadingarms,jn Au;.r v are also the diploma hatred everything that is Fascist who ¢ to worry about the very | MERRY-GO-ROUND... Gal. 2 ..J real problem of whether American so far as I have been able arme, once shipped to Europe, will|to find, the exercise of a freedom ever be used in actual battle by |of choice at a truly free ballot box Eurcpean armies which have nojis as nonexistant in Spain as it love for Fascist dictators and toyis ih Communist Russia. whorm Franco has become a hated “I have not been able to bring symt myself in this wrestle with my Mt as the French government | conscience to vote in favor of what has wanted American planes, ahd |I think looks like a bribe to Franco hear as the French government | for military bases and thereby give supports the United States, the | support to what I think is any- sena‘ors who voted $100,000,000 to|thing kut freedom of choice in Franco probably forgot the U. S.|Spain,” Morse shouted. “I cannot plancs to France had to be un-|bring myself to think we strengthen loadcd in North Africa, because{freedom by bribing either Fascism Fr longshoremen would not jor Communism. handle them “I think,” he added, “the first Thus all the war materiel we can |test to our making a loan to Spain manufacture and all the bases v\e‘ls whether or not Franco Spain might ‘obtain in Spain through|can meet the tests of the Uniteéd bribing Franco will mean nothing, | Nations for membership. Jvarn {riendly diplomats, if “If I thought that by this loan can't llied troops to fire our|we could save the life of a single} guns American boy, I would pay a bribe to Franco to save that life,” con- tinued the senator from Oregon. “However, I fear that this loan will e an aid to lying Russian propa- ganda about us. I fear that this loan will raise doubts as to our devotion to the principles of free-} dom. I fear that this loan will not men who pulled wires behind {stand the judgment of history.” ckstage Wire-Pulling hile what happened which, oh April 27, 1 aid by a vote of 42- last week voted for Spanish 65 to 15 Th here is the backstage in the rejected and aid, story of Sen the ccenes were Vice President| Afterward, Morse came off the Bark son-in-law Max Truitt, { floor, shaking his head sadly. who paid lobbyist of the “I feel like resigning from the Si h assy; Charles Patrick | Senate,” be brooded. “Most of the Clark, another paid lobbyist who hbersls have surrendered to their works through Sen. Owen Brewster | iears.” of Maine and Congressman Eugene Keogh of Brooklyn; and Sen. Pat Migratory Problem McCarran of Nevada who has spent} The House agriculture committee, a great deal of time visiting Spain{egged on by big southwestern as the gest 3f dictator Franco. farmers, is trying to sidetrack a Extremely important also was the | Presidential investigation of the backstage wirepilling of Secretary | migratory labor problem in Calif- Johnson and military leaders. They {ornia, Texas and the southwest. decided to buck what they knew§ The probe is of conditions among was te Department policy | the 5,000,000 Mexicans, West In- again and they won dians, Puerto Ricans, Filipinos, as It had been agreed by Democratic | well as Oakies and Arkies. Chil- before the Spanish debate|dren six years of age are reported Sen. Clinton Anderson of| by investigators to be working from tico would raise a point of fdawn to dusk in the big fruit and inst McCarran’s loan to]vegetable farms, and living in de- Franco, leaders Franco, since it was tacked onto|plorable conditions. an appropriation bill and since the The investigation was almost Senate had already voted downjspiked months . ago by George authorization for Spanish aid. Luckey, close friend of the Pres- But Democrafic ! cas of Ilinois hurr: Anderson not to rai Scott Lu-{ident and a California-Texas catfle instructed | rancher, Luckey, who has always ice this point of {had an enlightened labor policy order. himself, nevertheless tried to per- After the loan was voted, Ander- lsyade Mr. Truman not to name a gon backed Lucas into the hall and } commission on migratory labor, as demanced to know why Democratic | requested by Secretary of Labor Jeaders had taken it upon them-}Maurice Tobin and supported by selves to chdnge American policy | Secretary of State Dean Acheson. toward Spain without consulting| Despite his friend Luckey, Mr. others. Lucas shrugged and ex-|{Truman recently named the body, plained that it had all happened 5o |and instructed such top-flight fig- fast, he didn’t have time to spread {ures as Dr. Willilam Leiserson, for- the word. mer ehairman of the National Me- Lucas admitted he hadn’t diation Board, to investigate and :ader con- sulted the White House, but in-!make recommendations on migra-| I R | \ jor see the explosion was named, was christened by Mrs. Harry I - business Manager Iy ,..c whose husband was mayor of Juneau at that and was blown up by including the five Sullivan brothers of We can be proud of the ship that bears the name Call If the Korean war is another Spanish can be proud of the role that our namesake in the present contest. and has three children. probably one of the of Indian Affairs. erected for the Indian under his direction. Chi Alpha, As most westerners, But no train emerged from (l\c\ the tunnel.” we know, was launched at Kearny, was christened by Mrs. Ernest Gruen- 1 Juneau, after which the “galloping | a Japanese torpedo on 2 at the southern end of “The Slot,” running northwest-southeast through nds. All but ten of the first Juneau’s “galloping ghost of the nd we still like it. We are proud, ries the flag of Rear Admiral John les because the ship has “what the de corps.’ of the supply line from Russia smm(ls of Mr. Hemingway's “For Whom the her the " THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. JUNEAU, ALASKA AUGUST 7 William Parke Hallie Rice George Gullufsen, Leon Alexander Gene Bowman Geraldine Gibbons Hazel McPherson Jr. | ® eeccccccce ® se0cccccnse COMMUNITY EVENTS TODAY t 7:30 p.m.—Creative Writers meet at home of Mrs. William Krasilov- ut Wade and Foster (Ketchikan News) Wade has been named by Oscar Chapman of the Interior Department to succeed Don |At 8 pm tedent of the Bureau of Indian Af- Wade has been director of the Social Security Administration in Alaska. in Des Moines, Towa. He is married He first engaged in general law pracice and was special agent for the FBI. Later he was administrator for the NRA in Alaska. He is 1 Catholic and a Democrat. Don Foster was born in Kingfisher, Oklahoma attle ranch before coming to Alaska. He is a married man. Foster had a wide acquaintance nd Indians in the west which was reasons he went into the Bureau to Alaska, many buildings have been He is a Alpha Zeta, and with no n Legion, Methodist Amer Mason, the n It is understood Wade will take over the office Foster will be transferred to Minne- not in a position to judge the merits of the proposed changes, we have always liked Foster he has always been tions. Moereover, one might disagree with his ‘uu(:ns the interest of the Indians at heart. tory labor. The commission’s first hearings were July 13 and 14. Four days later, the House ag- riculture committee held a hearing on the same subject and listened to a string of big farmers who import labor. Edwin Mitchell, rep- resenting the National Farm Labor Union and the small farmers, was given a rough going-over by Rep E. C. “Took” Gathings of Arkansas, who comes from a cotton plantation district. The cmmittee also an- nounced it would duplicate the commission’s efforts by holding hearings in the field too. Preliminary studies by the com- mission reveal that exploitation of lmlgram. labor can be stopped chiefly by personnel planning on all farms between 1,000 to 10.000’ acres; also the elimination of cifid labor, improved housing, year- round jobs, and social security. One corporation farm outfit, Beech- nut, is setting an example for the | industry by its enlightened labor policy. Note—the State Department came into the labor picture because the Mexican government has protested alleged robbing of Mexicap labd: in the United States. (URTIS SHATTUCKS TENTH ANNIVERSARY | IS OBSERVED FRIDAY | 1 A family dinner party at their home Friday night observed the tenth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs, Curtis G. Shattuck. Guest of honor was Miss Virginia Shattuck who is in Juneau visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Shattuck at their country home. Guests from out of town were Mr. and Mrs. Archie W. Shiels who re- cently arrived from their home in Bellingham. {AMERICAN LEGION sky, 412 Willoughby Avenue. | At 8 p.m.—American Legion, Dug- | out. August 8 At noon—Rotary Club, Baranof. —Council of Civilian De- | in City Council | fense will meet Chambers. At 8 pm.—Odd Fellows will meet | in IOOF Hall. August 9 At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof. At 1:30 pm.—Garden Club meets at | home of Mrs. E. J. Cowling. Elflc-} tion of officers. At 1:30 p.m.—Afternoon plbcle: &8 M. C. meets at home of Mrs. Lloyd | Coe, Auk Lake. | At 8 pm.—Elks Lodge meets. August 10 | At noon—Chamber of Commerce, | Baranof. At 6:30 pm. — Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club at Mendenhall range. | August 14 | At noon—Lions Club, Baranof. | 4,000 JOIN IN PORTlAND MAINE, WAR ON HOARDING PORTLAND, Me., Aug. 7—®—The | Portland Plan — a war against| hoarding—is under way with nearly| 4,000 adherents. | They pledged themselves, at a| floodlighted rally in the Municipal | Stadium last night, not to buy any- | thing beyond their “immediate | needs” during the Korean crisis. The rally kicked off a week-long campaign for signed pledges from | greater Portland’s 100,000 residents. | First of the lapel pins to be| given signers went to U.S. Senator | Margaret Chase Smith (R-Me). Mrs. Smith told the rally crowd | she hopes their inspiration “will | sweep the country from Maine to | California.” | MEMBERS TO PAINT | DUGOUT TONIGHT The weatherman gave the go- ahead signal today to the members of Juneau Post No. 4, the American Legion, so that long-postponed plans for painting the outside of the Dug- out will finally be completed to- night. All Legionnaires are urged to turn out at 7:30 o’clock tonight and help | get the job done in quick order. Plenty of ladders, paint brushes and paint will be on hand plus refresh- ments which will be furnished by Legionnaire Fred Cameron. Post Comamnder Bob Druxman reminded all American Legion mem- bers that the Dugout must be made presentable for the annual Ameri- can Legion Alaska convention to be held in Juneau on September 2 of this year. PHILLIPS HERE Daniel Phillips of Yakutat is at | the Gastineau Hotel. S T8 me T - I "AcROs& 30 Austraitan btra | 1 Makes breaa 3L oid Dutc ] 6 Postal liquid certificate measurgy | 1. witndraw 2 Pertalning 12. Glee club ¥ i necessities 85. Writer 14 Exclamation 3. Instigate 5. Diminishe 89. Catnip . ol 8 ¥ g 41. Greek portico 20. Red cedar 42, Cover 2L Character fn 43 Scatter “Uncle 45. Type squares Tom's 46, Small fish Cabin" 47. Without 22. Alwaya’ beginning | 25 Waste 1. Extpt 54 Detergents OWN allowance 50, Football 5. Liuid fiying - :& Soparates position in small A s elocities 52, Plays drops £ e 5. Parts of Crossword Puzzle /fllflfll% owers 6. Long narrow pleces 1. find ten: sufx . Midwestern | | state: abbr, | Turned out | ) ‘é‘l‘éllu.l kit ing Venerated Sead payment ,!& ai o JEE i , /é o Bllll ol sorrow Score buablll Moccasin Acid found fruits Pays out | { Lonllhwh. threads Greek letter 8. K.lnd of ape Denial Mother | erely 'thcy have been placed by the waiter. from r“2'0 YEARS AGO 7 EMPIRE et i i d - AUGUST 17, 1930 Rehearsals were stepped up for production of the Elks' show, “The Hoodoo.” Performing in the musical prologue were Misses Winifred Carlson, Belva Williams, Dorothy Rutherford, Rhoda Minzghor, Irene . Dagney Hagerup, Eleanor Neal Irvine, Esther E. Judson, Joyce ris and Rosena Messerschmidt. Featured in novelty numbers were Mrs. Mary Norris Goss, little Lanore Kaufmann, with a chorsu “of six little kiddies”; Misses Esther and Elizabeth Kaser; diminutive dancer Ella Wolland, and Ted Keaton . Awaiting the arrival of his wife and their three children, L. C‘ Kem\ was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Brown in Douglas. Keith, a| newcomer from Tacoma, was employed as machinist at the Alaska Juneau. William Ott, manager of the Douglas Coliseum Theatre, was sev- but not dangerously burned when a film was ignited in the operating room. He and William Cashen extingunshed the fire with | chemicals, but not before Ott had been burned about the face and hands. He was taken to St. Ann's Hospital. Special Fisheries Warden John McLoughlin, who had been on duty in Chatham Strait for six weeks, arrived on the gasboat Valkyrie, Capt. | Woods. They had maintained a patrol of herring districts, as' well as inspecting fish traps and trolling fleets “Hospital Notes” was this item: “Two new residents are making then !mme at St. Ann’s Hospital—the baby boy of Mr. and Mrs. William Jones, born yesterday, and the baby girl of Mr. and Mrs. Michael | Avoian, born this morning.” Weather: High, 71; low, 54; overcast. Daily Lessons i English % 1. corpoN WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Try to avoid using GOOD as an ad- jective for everything pleasing, such as, a good climate, a good soil, | good friends, good disposition. Instead, say HEALTHFUL climate, FER- | TILE soil, FAITHFUL friend, CHEERFUL disposition. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Costume. Pronounce the U as in USE, nm kos-tbom. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Stationary (fixed); material) ; ERY. SYNONYMS: Almighty, all-powerful, nmnipotent. 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: PIQUE (verb); to offend by slighting. (Pronounce PEEK). “He was piqued by the attitude of the other club members.” MODERN ETIQUETTE Xomerra rze || e ) ARY. Stationery (writ- ing Q. When dining in a restaurant, if food is brought in individual dishes, is it correct to place dishes in one’s plate for eating, or to transfer the food to one's plate for eating? A. When food is served, in such dishes, it should be eaten directly from them. The dishes should remain on the table approximately where Under no circumstonces should a dish be placed on the plate. Q. Do the bridegroom and his best man enter the church side by |side for the wedding ceremony? A. They enter the church, usually from the vestry — but the bride- | groom should precede, followed by the best man. Q. Should a vegetable be buttefed at the dinner table with the knife or the fork? 1 A. With the fork. LOOK and I.EARN " C. GORDON e e e e e ittt} 1. How much would a men weighing 175 pounds here weigh on the sun? 2. What six army generals became Presidents of the United States? 3. How many standard cups of water are there in one pound? 4. What two States of the Union are divided into the greatest num- ber of counties? 5. What is the oldest breed of dog? ANSWERS: 1. Almost 2% times, because the force of gravity on the sun is 25 nmes that of the earth. 2. Washington, Jackson, W. H. Harrison, Taylor, Grant and Gar- field. 3. Two cups. « 4. Texas (254) and Georgia (159). 5. The greyhound. H. ANDERSON 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: "WE WERE STRANGERS" Federal Tux—1%c Paid by the Thesfre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO0. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name Mdy Appear! —————————————————————————— g 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 atures at varlous Alaska ponts am; 120th Meridian Time, snd released Ly the Weather Bureau are as follows: HOSPITAL NGTES Mrs. Austin D. Earl, Sidney Voiles, and Mrs. mitted to St. Ann’s hospital over the weekend. Ludwig Nelson and cnrr Nordenson were dismissed. admitted to the Government hos pital. fant “daughter were Mrs. James Lindoff of Haines, Mrs. Sammy Garlitos of Douglgs, and Mrs. Paul Culik of Angoon. SEATTLEITES HERE Among Seattleites newly regis- tered at the Baranof Hotel are H. R. Forehand, K. K. Kenn, Larry | G. Anderson and Ronald Angdahl. FROM PELICAN is at the Baxanof Huhel V.F. W. Taku Post No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. Brownie's Liquor Sfore Phene 183 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 2598 p— Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 399 The Erwin l;eed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery Phone 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Purth and Pranklin Bts. PEONE 136 [} Casler’s Men's Wear MecGregor S) ruwm Btetson and Arrow Shirts and um Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luaggage - BOTANY m' CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing Cemplete Outfitter for Men R. W. COWLING ~ COMPANY DeSoto—Dodge Trucks SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 N | Alaska Points Weather conditions and temper- | also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30] Jane English were ad- ! Mary Whitaker of Klukwan and | Francine Jackson of Hoonah were Each dismissed with her in-| Hagen, W. C. Arnold, O. Bergseth, | Mrs. George Bachman of Pelican | | ~ | | { MONDAY ,AUGUST 7, 1950 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE N 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, B. P. 0. ELKS | Meeting every second and fourth Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting 143 Anchorage ... 43~C)ear' brothers welcome. WALLIS 8. Annette Island 50—Pamy Cloudy!| GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H. Barrow 45—Cloudy | BIGGS, Becretary. Bethel 53—Cloudy Cordova 42—Partly Cloudy | frm— Dawson e . 38—Clear | Edmonton ...... 49—Clear | mm L'dge 'o' 1" Fairbanks .. 50—Foggy | Meetings Each Friday Haines ... 50—Partly Cloudy Govemur— Havre .. 56—Clear(| ARNOLD L FRANCIS Juneau Airport 46—Partly. Cloudy Secretary— Kodiak 54—Partly Clondy || WALTER R. HERMANSEN Kotzebue 5 54—Cloudy | | McGrath 42— Partly Cloudyi——-—— Nome 4S-Driming | & e e T Northway ... 40—Partly Cloust | BLACKWELL’S Petersburg . 52—Raining CABINET SHOP Portland 60—Cloudy Prince George 0 Cloudy (1 117 ME S Phone 773 Seattle 56—Clouy High Quality Cabinet Werk Sitka g 53—Drizzlihg for Home, Office ur Stere Whiteharse 39—Partly Cloudy ¥ Yakutat $3—Cloudy || "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply } Artbhur M. Uggen, Manager || Pisnos—Musical Instruments i and Supplies GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Phorte 549 Fred W. Wendt e e Card Beverage Co. ‘Wholesale 805 10th S¢. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT H for MIXERS or SODA POP ] ——— The Alaskan Hotel Newly Reuovated Reoms &t Reasonable Rates PHONE BINGLE O i PHONE 665 ———————— e Thomas Hardware (o, PAINTS — OILS Bullders’ and Shelt HARDWARE | Remington SOLD and -38:&"»".;' J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Autherized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL || Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street i S Gr | MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM {1 & daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines [ MACHINE SHOP ! Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. 3. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS ! for Boys “Say It With Flowers” “SAY IT WITH OURa Juneau Florists Phone 311 e ok K s