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PAGE FOUR TIIE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1950 Daily Alaska Empire | mmu "'w-ti evening except Sunday by lao PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska EELEN TROY MONSEN - - - President TROY LINGO - - - vm-rmmm ELMER A. FRIEND - - - - ln aging Bdi ALFRED ZENGER - - - - lu.nur Butered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. & SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ®elivered by carrier in Juneau and Douslas for $1.50 per mo: six months, $5.08; one year, $15.00 By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: Cme year, in advance $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; | #me muth, In advance, $1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly motity he Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery *f their paper: hones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for fepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local mews published In. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Aiaska Newspapers, 1411 foirth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. * v ) Tuesday, September 19, 1950 THE MEMORIAL LIBRARY Juneau members of the International Association of Sidewalk Superintendents have had a busy week supervising the preliminary excavation for the new Memorial Library. Since Miss Ann Coleman, long time Juneau li- brarian, turned the first earth, the big power shovel and bulldozer have kept the dirt moving apace. ‘While the commencement of construction is heart- ening to the many who have worked and subscribed for the project since 1946, there is still much to be ac&lished before the Memorial Library is open.for business. Some $20,000.00 pledged remains to be paid. Al- though library pledges are not due until 1951, Chair- man B. Frank Heintzleman of the Library Board has requested that these pledges be met early as is pos- sible in order to have money available for matching Federal Public Works funds. The response to date has been gratifying. Beginning with Carpenters Local 2247, pledges have been met daily and the committee has been as- sured of further early fulfillments. Juneau’s Memorial Library represents more than a repository for books—more than a mere municipal building. It will stand as a monument to Juneau's war dead and as a constant tribute to the spirit of the community whose effort made it possible. We're proud that we live in Juneau. WHAT OTHERS THINK Of course we are all pleased at the new landings in Korea-and-also-—diseuss Gen.-Marshell-as the-new Secretary of Defense. But it is interesting to find out what others think about both moves. The new landings in Korea are discussed by Brit- ish newspapers. The Washingfon Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) “Who is next Biemiller asked. mass-produced earller. Bazookas in Nick of Time “It was fortunate that we per-, fected them as soon as we did.”|dent. replied Collins, who commanded| the capture of Cherbourg in the| Normandy invasion and has had| plenty of bazooka experience. He | went on to explain the difficulty in developing the delicate, pre- ‘termer protested he had no inside To which jority Leader, Tony.” Tauriello into a Soviet 60-ton tanks. The shells| Ohio that can bore through 14 inches | of armor—a project that took con- siderable perfecting by Army Ord- Figety A chubby little Hitler moustache nance. After the handmade models | the Senate Interior Committee. it was Frank T. Bow, were completed, Collins added, was a problem to convert to mass! production and the Army ghost-written the as the Korean war broke. Collins briefed the Senators from a war map, which caused him v.o‘ remark that the Army has dev- eloped a new plastics process for| Wyoming asked: Chapman, announced, Tauriello flock of congratulations, inference from Wisconsin's Biemiller that Tauriello was axman for the White House. The Buffalo Democerat and first- Cormack of Massachusetts, the Ma- said: bout Johnson going before I did, Rep. Stephen Young, Ohio, pulled | cision shells for these new super' him Johnson’s rezr;;:::\o:ndwobzig cAP n'o!- THEATRE | bazookas, which finally stopped the | so bolster Democrat that Senator release a concentrated ray of heat|would probably be defeated. was ' Senator Andrew Schoeppel of Kan- lucky in having them finished just|sas tried to pin the Red label on Secretary of the Interior After a full day if inquiry, zled Chairman Joe O'Mahoney of | | i PRI Crossword Puzzle The London Times concentrates on the new land- ings and says it speéaks of these attacks as “heralding a new and brighter phase in the Korean war,” and says that there is more imagination and enterprise than orthodoxy in the latest news of General Mac- Arthur’s activities. The Times goes on: “The tremendous factor of sea power, until now supplying the defense, is turning to the offensive. The | Americans may have grounds for believing that the North Koreans are ripe for the plucking. There are large difficulties still to overcome, and there may be large dangers ahead. The reactions of those who prompted and provisioned this wanton aggression, as they see their plans undone and driven astray, cannot yet be reckoned.” The Daily Telegraph says: “The initiative in planning and execution seems now to have shifted definitely to our side.” ‘The paper thinks that this may well prove de- cisive. September 19 . A. B. Phillips Mrs. L. R. Carriga William Franks Wendell Schneider Mrs. R. L. Davlin Mrs. George Moore George Moore, Jr. C. W. Stevenson Owen Hales Beatrice Mury Tom Paddod ® @ ® o o o 0o o o ¢ MINFIELD RESERVOIR FUND TAG DAY T0 BE HELD THIS WEEKEND .. |son o | Mr. The News Chronicle declares: “The news of the landings is a tonic for the whole free world, and if they can be consolidated success- fully, the whole shape of the campaign will be altered “For the first time the United Nations hold the initiative in the main strategy of the war.” Regarding the new Secretary of Defense all papers et 20 YEARS AGO %5 mxprns | o |husband after he suffered a hear lon the next trip of the Queen. SEPTEMBER 19, 1930 e Wild geese briefly threatened an invasion in a southhound rlock | of honkers estimated to number from 200 to 300, flying quite low." snow on Mount Juneau was another portent of an early winter. | mercury had dropped to 37 two nights before, but climbed back quickly. Fres] The Carl Erickson had refused to fool around with a cold . He went to St. Ann’s Hospital to cure it, and was out in three days. who hurt his back in a fall, was a new patient. of Funter Bay, W Mrs. Frank Suffecool w Chapman Nel- called here from Skagway to be with her attack following dental treatment. Suffecool was greatly improved and the couple planned to return Deputy U. S. Marshal W. E. James Hawthorne had taken over the dance school in the A. B.; 211 for- both private and class instruction in ballroom dancing. commented Bert They were at the Gastineau Hotel. Feero of Douglas left on the Admiral Rogers for an official trip to Seattle and Portland. manager of the | which comment on it, welcome the appointment of The Business and Professional | “Fine day for ducks,” Hansen, General Marshall to succeed Mr. Louis Johnson as|Women's Club will sell Fri- | yuneau Ice Cream Parlors, who bagged ten of them at daylight, in day and Saturday to r: funds fol United States Secretary of Defense. The Times says: “President Truman has replaced a source of poli- tical weakness with the power of non-partisan strength and has created fresh confidence at home and abroad in the stability of American foreign policy. “When it was imperative to bring the military and foreign policies together, Mr. Johnson opposed Mr. Acheson’s statesmanlike approach to Formosa and Japan. and stalemate and uncertainty were the con- the construction of a new concrete reservoir at the Minfield Home, Miss Olive Montel, t day chair- man announced today. Member of the Teen-age Club will sell the tags. Contributions can al- | 50 be made by mail to the Minfield Reservoir Fund, post office b 49. Juneaun. she stoted & Territorial X and sequences.” Health sawitary engueer has for | The Times thinks Mr. Johnson's chief fault wasj|some time urged that a concrete obeying, too zestfully the instructions to keep down |reservoir be built at the home, the defense budget and he failed to warn the Presi- dent of the risks that were being run. water supply tank constructed 10 inancy Burke. Like the Times, other papers think Mr, Johnson ;’]"‘1’“‘;;‘“"‘“‘:3{“ fl'[’l‘“ {ms l:r‘ur B Y failed to work with Mr. Acheson, and the Manchester ‘,’mj Mh‘lmm‘ Home is 17 miles| Willls T. Batcheller, Seattle engineer and son of W. H. Batcheller | from Juneau on Bay lof the Northern Sales Agency here, was to head a $3,000,000 hydro- TO COLLE son of M. ED SHAFF Ed Shaffer repair this omission. It says: “Not only is General Marshall’s name the symbol of one of the finest acts of American policy, but he ! Guardian has no doubt that General Marshall willl Jr. has the statesmanlike temper towards China that is |Mrs. Ed Shaffer, owners of the |Qui much needed just now.” ‘Snmmr_y Meat Market, ll‘L Sunday i There are several similar tributes to General | by Pan American clipper for Segj i : i § attle to enroll in his junior year at | Marshall, and the Daily Graphic says: Seattle University. “He has the constant confidence of all the free|in accounting. ! nations and his appointment is a guarantee that the | needs and difficulties of the Atlantic Powers, besides jy charged that he suspected some | the United States’, will be understood and met as far { of his city council had received | a bribe in connection with decon- | as possible.” i The News Chronicle offérs similar praise, while | trolling rents and urged his guest| SRR to ask Attorney General McGrath | the Dally Express says: = : G e meealiaranii sy it OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Glower. Pronounce glou-er, “General Marshall’s appointment is the best news Sestization: in/OUR ad not as O iniGLOW. yeu trogy The Mosgen wat. “In all my 20 years in public| ' OFTEN MISSPELLED: Necessarily; one C, two S's. “The Senate Crime Investigating Committee re- life, I have never seen a city coun-, observed Mayor cil like this one,” ports that organized crime exercises a corrupting in- | Bowron. “When I first came in fluence on public officials in many places.”"—News mayor, I had a bad city coun- Item. This surprises us about as much as if the com- | ¢il, but I “"“‘1‘!1 trade l”"‘* _one, fax my {first council any time.” i 2 Is 4. - ! mittee had reported that 2 plus 2 equals Note-Msanuhtle. the Hnukmt“ll\f‘ e Gikpely é expeditor’s office has sent an inves- To print new paper money which is wearing out, { tigator to Los Angeles to find out | millions is being appropriated by the government. {why the rent ceiling was lifted at | time when the war boom is 1% The bills are thinner, 41 per cent of the value having {a been sandpapered off.—(Lynden Tribune). received al L. A. Mayor Suspects Scandal i bringing more people into the city. to| sent back ifirmed repor | ‘The investigator Washington an unc that a city coun member had plus an| Forthright Mayor Fletcher Bow- { received a Cadillac a pay Andy| ron Offll:‘{-j‘ g“‘r’nf’“s h“S.:‘-"‘C"Fz““f'l jbut the investigator also reported | anting etficlils. Lo Saqpaes. . Brters jcandidly that the rent office had |he | or ry vestiga i i | grand jury to investigate his oWn | g ne 4 poor job of administering list?” | city council. on your } rent controls in Los Angeles, At a private breakfast with 8 :had been particularly unfair to top Housing official, Bowron blunw- the small apartment owners. [ & to no avail that; from the Presi- Rep. John Mec- EFFIE COCK as a paid-up subscriber 10 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING ! Present this coupon to the box office of the “You knew chances in | Robert Taft | and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "SWORD IN THE DESERT" | Federal Tux—1%c Paid by tne Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phone 22 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and | 1 RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. | WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appearl Accuser | man with a limp | fidgeted before He | and he had! speech in which | Oscar puz- | Thane road, adding a new Department of | S. Jorgensen, Pigeon there overnight. The He is MAjoring | poee. breaking out or bu i 5. building relief maps, reducing the with the statement that you make | cost of relief maps from $35 to 601 no charge of personal dl‘fl()\fllt)" ACROSS 24. Narrow road cents per square foot. | against Secretary Chapman?” L Playing cards 25. English river This caused Kentucky's Senator! “Yes, Sir,” Bow replied meekly. ! 6. Provided with 27. Provided Virgil Chapman to look round the| Earlier in the hearings, Bow had | g D"“,"" 29. Skill room, and noting that economy- said that he dug his criticism| 12 pessess i o minded Senator Byrd of Virginia of Chapman out of the files of | 13. Persian falry Biblical king was not present, he observed:: “Be | the House Committee on un-Ameri- | 14. Card game . Myselt sure to tell Senator Byrd about | can Activities. 1 :: !Drdy' . that. “Has the House committee ever A5 of . Staggers General Collins also talked about | brought charges against Secretary | ' WPigTay ™ 3% Gheatert . the 38th parallel, along which his| Chapman??” shot back O'Mahoney.| 20. Colors . Companions son served as an Army. officer| “Not to my knowledge.” Bow ad- | 2L Of a Mediter- 4= WOTKSA oo Solution of Yesterday's Puzz| before the invasion. lmmedA | e Write . “The 38th paralll is nothing| He also testified that he re-! 23. Less bright L L 8"5.'5}?.?" B Goicked but an imaginary line. It ‘doesn't|ceived his anti-Chapman informa- | 5% Obstruction follow any river, mountain range|tion two years ago when he ws or natural barrier,” he explained.! counsel for the old Harness Com- | Somtimes it cuts right through| mittee in the 80th Congress. DOWN 1. Sunken fence 2. Automobils 8. l\m‘:’\l‘enl the middle of a rice paddy, hence| ‘“You want use to infer,” asked | g i{‘l‘”‘,'“'(“ 1 the people living along the 3a‘h the exasperated O'Mahoney, “that i snm-(v..':g parallel “pay no attention to it.”, when you were counsel for the R i However, Gen. Collins didn’'t say ' Harness Committee, you did not 7. e whether the Allied Armis would regard this evidence as of sufficient 8. f pay. any attention to it. The de-! moment to justify you to ask the 9. elsion, he indicated, would be left! Attorney General for investigation. i Throw ligh up to the United Nations. / Did you personally examine Oscar | e Ruert. ak § | Chapman? | B i Lo Axman Tauriello | “No, Sir” replied Bow, “I did, 1 Bhelltan Dapper Congressman ‘tony Taur-!not. . .before this committee T am jello, the Italian-American from maklng no charges.” Buffalb, is unow greeted in the| Disgusted, Senator Jim Murray Congressiona! cloakrooms as “Bad|of Montana commented, “we should News Tonjy.” | be This is because Secretary of De- 'ty ashamed of ourselves listening this kind of stuff when our fense Louey Johnson resigned jusv/;wumry is threatened with daugela’ a few days after Tauriello’s scathing | in the world.” Jetter demanding that he quit. Bow spoke up, The morning Johnson's ouster was'loyalty of Mr “I do not doubt the J | | | \ | Chapman,” l certain Induced 10, Measure 42. Plaything 14 5. Unit of work | blustering wind and rain. | Due to inclement weather, the Methodist Church Epworth Le'\r'uc' picnic was called off, according to Tona Messer, vice-president. Standard Oil Company had greatly improved its facilities on the equipment. “Our wharf is one of the best in Alaska, Juneau agent. Stormy Sitka-bound, report appeared in the Wenatchee (Wash.) ncy Irrigation District. low, 44; Weather: High, 50; rain. WORDS OFT MISUSED: Do not SYNONYMS: Protection, fense. WORD STUDY: increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. DISCREETLY; cautious! ; prudently. “She quickly and deor.” “Use a word three times and it is yours.” wharf, warehouse, shed and additional nmk.suuNEAu SINGERS Io boasted Martin weather at Sitka held the Pioneer Airways seaplane Sea Pilot Jerry Smith had had at.‘ BPW spokesmen said. The present | passengers Charles Raatakainen, fisherman, and a Juneau visitor, Miss | electric development project in the Portland Canal district near Hyder. World near where and | Batcheller was in charge of engineering on a Chelan project and for the (act of preservation, safety, security, custody, de- Let us Today's word: creetly closed 'MODERN ETIQUETTE %sprra 1ms When a house guest wishes to Q. -off, | tshould he present it? A. He may bring may send it to her soon afer his departure. Q. Is it obligatory that a and | ding present? el ive his hostess a little gift, when it along and present it soon after his arrival, or | girl secretary send her employer a wed- A. Only if she has received an invitation to the wedding and re- tion. Q. A. No, this is not necessary. | Is it necessary for a girl to thank a man who has brought her home from a party? LOOK and LEARN § b C. GORDON e e e e} 1. What country has long been called “the playground of the world”? 2. What king was killed while mountain climbing in 1934? 3, Which anniversary is the wooden one? 4. What famous dramatist was married to Anne Hathaway? What is “transposition” in music? ANSWERS: 1. Switzerland. Albert I, of Belgium. 3. The fifth. 4. William Shakespeare. 5. The changing of music from one key to another. 0il Burners Telephone Blue 737 Harri Machine Shop, 12th and E Street Oldest Bank in Alaska Plumbing ® Heaing Nights-Red 730 Inc. 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1950 . The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Daily Lessons in English %, .. corpox § e e e e ettt} | confuse ERUPTION ng forth) with IRRUPTION (a bursting in). OU as| MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO, 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month n Scottish Rite T'emple beginning at 7:30 p. m. Carson A. Lawrence, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secrstary. Weather af Alaska Poinis Weather conditions and temper- | tyes at various Ala points also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 @ 1m., 120th Meridian Time, and B' P' 0' ELKS released by the Weather Blureat 1 Meeting evezy second and fourth are ‘Hs follow: g | Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting Anchorage 43—Partly Cloudy| Prothers welcome. WALLIS 8 Annette Island —Rain | « GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H Barrow 3'?7-Snnw Showers| BIGGS, Secretary. Bethel . 46—Partly Cloudy o Cordova 50—Rain D?Wsun 38—Partly Cloudy | Moose Lndge “0. 700 B tor 2—Partly . Edmonton 42—Partly Cloudy || Recular Meetings Each Fridsy Fairbanks 46—Cloudy Governor. Haines — {3 Hayre @ Farty) ooty || ARSUED L UMY Juneau 51—Rain Showers| f:;f'}g—fl HERMANSEN Kedigk 47—Rain | v Kotzebue 38—Clear | McGrath 44—Cloudy | n Nome 43—Partly Cloudy | Northway 36—Partly Cloudy | BI‘ACK‘WELL,S Petersburg 52—Rain CABINET SHOP Portland 57—Cloudy | 117 Main St. Phone T3 Prince George —Partly Cloudy Seattle 51—Cloudy|| ~Hish Quality Cabinet Werk Sitka . 59—Rain for Home, Office or Store Whitehorse 50—Cloudy | * | Yakutat 53—Rain | - "The Rexall Store” Your Rellable Pharm..Jsts MEET THURSDAY NIGHT The first fall meeting of the Ju-| . BUTLER-MAUROQ i neau Singers will be held Thursday DRI RUG CO. at 8:45 church Streets, | the choral gre! Under ‘the lead pn., in the Methodist ] « at’ Fourth and. Seward| Alaska Music Supply Dick Freer, president off p, announced today. ! ship of last sea- | Arthur M. U; | Earke? B | - Uggen, plans are being ma present | and Supplies the' Ohristmas - portion of -Handel's|{ prone 988 _Sec Messiah again. New music has been ~Second and Beward. { ordered for a secular comcert some | time after the first of the year,| | Freer declared. | GENERAL PAINTS He said all members of last sea-| | son’s group will be welcomed back | and WALLPAPER | and new members of the commun- | ity interested in choral singing are| idcal Paint Stere invited to attend the meeting. Phone 549 Pred W. Wendt SCHWINN BIKE — e V.F. W. Card Beverage Co. | Taku Post No. 5559 | Meeting every Thursday in | the C.I.0. Hall at 8:00 p.m. i | | AT MADSEN'S 1 ! 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY er NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP e —— o ——— \ —— e = e The Alaskan | Brownie's Liguor $I07€ ||| s nooern Eflel fi!mm 153 Bo. Frankiin | :‘nmmh-“ 1[ P. O. Box 25% ; OPN;O:I:w o i Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Bhelf HARDWARE GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS ! FHONE 399 ;l Remington ewrit: SOLD and sggxfln :;' The Erwin Feed Co. J. B. Burford Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery ‘ Phone 784 “Our Doorstep Is Worn by | HAY, GRAIN, COAL Satistied Customers” , and STORAGE ‘ FORD AGENCY uthcrized Dealers) STEVENS® GREASES — GAS — oL : . L Tt Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street Beward Street ~ Near Third MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM & daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Daries, Inc. The Charles W. Carter || Mortuary Fourth and PFranklin Bts. PHONE 138 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 Casler’s Men's Wear McGregor Sportswear Btetzon and Mallory Hats Arrow Bhirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage BOTANY l'm‘l CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNIRG Complete Outfitter for Men R. W. COWLING COMPANY Dedge—Plymouth—Chrysles 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 SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Junean Florists ) FPhone 311 b “ “ i | | | |