The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 26, 1950, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire every evening except Sw PRINTING COMPANY s, Jun the Post in_Jun SUBSC Daivercd by carrier in June one year, t the following rates: ix months, in advance, snfer a favor if they ot 602; MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED exclusively entitled spatches credite 1 this paper and also the NTATIVES — Ala tl u as Second Class Matter. RIPTION RATES: d Dourlas for S1.50 per month; | failure or irregularity in the delivery Business Office, 374. heavy d and cities, help the | Korea ay by the Americ , Alaska President | scale conflict, in Manicsbresident | ericans ultimately What pride but wisdom. we $15.00 | $7.50 will promptly notify | eral Assembly adc PRI the use for | or not_other- publisheq r ago d to 1 local new: [ powers st the re third, t | Russia | salem thr | Church, would lJt:“.]un doubtl ! Ka Newsp The second th | resolution which Gener alization to | guards ligions necessary affected, mage on C in reprisal. And it probably need in (v Much water ha ization of the entire area of Jerusalem exactly Many on flouts the representative principle; s right hav ugh the holdings of Assembly. t Holy hina's military bases, mdustri(‘s,‘: But that probably would not troops battling for survival in would Iead us into a large- | ich far greater numbers of Am-| would be sacrificed. this particular crisis is not An Hol\ City hington Post) gone over the dam since the Gen- rted a resolution calling for inter: of those who supported the pro- asis of emotion rather than of Transjordan, the two stand for it; second, and, hands of Moscow. The est foreign stake in Jeru- of the Russian Orthodox 4 on the government of s in mo! /s than one. ughts ¢ ssed in the Swedish s submitted recenly to the present This simply restricts international- Places, and includes all the safe- Ira ntrol, el nor would into the e the bigg cou for the protection of the great re- Christian, Jewish, and Moslem. The | only exceptions from control, which would be exercised | b . N. commissionership, would be strictly Moslem and Tuesday, THE DAY AFTER | istmas, 1950, has come and long to be remember here in Juneau a things up gener: ip prevailing lives and adults { their young meant. The various Eve the devout t Day implied, IT'S DONE The delegation to the United come and gone. 1. Reg editor China h: ¥ wn to & Enquirer lly said: December 26, 1950 church and on Christmas Day Prayers went up for a peknu".nw Arab mE THAT WAY Nations from The purpose of the rding the situation, reason. el with Transjordan in no political gone and with it It was a| lthough the snow | ere Children had the exchanged grcet-‘ g service well at- ! a unifer on all m If this resolut first | cordingly it des | States. Peace was in ware | League, Azzam | perpe tuation of a |and for a negati Red | reconstruction cot visit | the Cm-‘ \ing and dining of Red China’s dcleamum‘ d the to negotiate the SOft-s , Wwhile done in the are nst the grain rglar to sit down for a bite tiate, wh But there do 2ed China probab! in adjacent s to support them. 38ps i all w0t all effective now | "she Washinglon | ;y -Go-Roun? ’ ror: Page One) y wounds. l h”fle come back | ath to a world that I nu‘, care for. I, who have been | wced in the great struggle to| the world from tyranny, and | ing seen my comrades die for | 1is cause, can now find no peace the world or in my country. Having lived close to death for! ¥o years, the reasons why there is eem infinitesimally flim- wants the Dardanelle: wants Trieste, the Mo India, labor wants m | capital wants more 1 wants to pass the car in| him. Junior wants more money. To these, I say, sary to kill and cripple | beings for these petty ne who thinks a human cheap that it can be a tract of land, a piece T a few minutes of| ould be forced to listen to| of the dying night and the rest of his life. | 1l the troubles of the world| iginate in the common man. The h and greedy way of nations just the way of each individ- 1 man muitiplied a hundredfold. en the morals of the common 1 drop, so do the morals of| the 1 ons of the world. As long as our individual morals remain at ebb, so will be the world. each of us stops ‘hogging the ' with his car, stops fighting| r the t on the bus, stups} ng over who is going to cut ass, there will be no peace | the world. man wishes peace again, he remember the great com- mandme ‘Love thy neighbor as| thyself for the love of God.” profit, | ay for a low | m 2,000 Year Struggle | Crown hit the nail on the| right in diagnosing the| world. But it seem pain-racked bod rlcok some of the ments we have our 2,000 years struggle upward toward the great goal Christ set for us—the Sermon on the Mount. | Teday i discouraging Christ- | mas for most of us, a Christmas during which our nation may ke | facing its greatest peril in history,| a time when our leaders sometimes | have tered, when we have made| stakes. ~ut out of this dl,su.umgomcnl,l Joh of to me t h aused him to ov great accomy made in massive ng down the Korean Peninsula in unlawful aggression. UN, and the way : are ) that would be the intelligent, if- unpalatable, | has 800,000 troops either in counting South Koreaun units We could inflict some | O j still rampant in the | because its path lies in the hearts; | take | Christ taught that | this veneer | ing poken efforts being made | are pretty hard for| forces of Red |cessity of preserving our apan anese mother ships near out coasts All Americans an |Dew treaty with To J to catch the fish { conserve and tk cheaper than it ards of living, Of SUPDET | Jeading industries. We've 1 That. however, with any one of alread, past in Bristol B We should b en he enters the | circumstances | of wort [ ‘ana the Unites Manchuria, with We'have perhaps There ly ov i3 now ! the I think one thing membered. Despite the intolerance which nd, and de { pite our faults and failings, this nation has made great progress in ! | erasping the chief vision Jesus of | narcxh gave us—the dignity ul‘ It is beiief in the dignity of man, waich through labor disputes wars revolutions, has slowly civilized the world. Sometimes its | progress has been imperceptible | measure | h men’s | of men. And while we | dolla and cents, it to measure the change hearts. can in Moscow's Mistake Hitler's greatest mistake was that‘ | he denied the dignity of man, and | | this may also be the greatest n of the leaders in Moscow. man was the son of God—the fallen son of God | and so, capable of doing evil, but still the son of.God. Hitler, how- ever, assumed that man was no more than the brightest of the | beasts and treated him as such. Hitler operated on the premise that as in the jungle, might makes righc.‘\ The leaders of Moscow have been | cleverer than that. They have putb | forward a propaganda which has | | convinced many parts of the world | they are operating for the beneff% | of their fellow men. But beneath of propaganda is the inescapable fact that -Moscow op- erates without any true unde | standing of the dignity of man. In Russia might still makes right, life in the cheapest of all commod- ities and slave-labor camps still flourish. | e Our Failure Herein lies our greatest failure.| While we have gradually carried | forward Christ’s creed in our own nation, and while we have poured great largess in food and materials into Europe, we have not transmit- ted with it the basic ideals for which we stand. We have not con- vinced our European friends that our hearts went along with the | handouts. We have not realized that the gift without the giver is bare. Equally important, we have not transmitted beyond the Iron Cur- tain any knowledge of the burn- fervent desire existing in this y for peace. We have not us- the ingenuity and courage of cou ed | aur forefathers in selling our ideals to the people of the nation which, day-by-day, now looks like our al- most certain enemy. We have been quite willing to pay the money or grow the 1ood, but we have said “let George do it” Jewish shrine: most nsjordan will proklim can stand so long s the Arab League is acknowledged as step in the pacific Tves though a doubt sometimi s on |of the fuss made as important there ¢ °n an be produced by American stand- means s out = s, Here is a solution resting upon probably will accept it, and | acquiesce in it. The trouble | as with other Arab states, is that there be any positive ~ciating to Palestine. epted, it would mark the | m of the Middle East. Ac- strong backing of the United E: is avowedly our s, a5 in the case secretary general of the Arab who came here recently. 3 nds for a holdout, for a tate of war, for a racial grouping, ' 1 of constructive solutions. This the the Middle f the | country needs to pursue in the Middle East a policy | of pacification along a truly geographical line, so that in in real earnest. Time is/ where. i b Fiwheriv\' Protection (Retchikan News) |1 should become aroused to the ne- fish industry in making n} which we pay out large sums to | sell it back to us imponv! ruin to one of the m\twn' had a good example of that in the iurday and Monday and took 25 tc me aroused at once to the neces- | equitable plan for both Japan i of sardines in Europe, a surplus »e it has had for vears, except a surplus when it came to disrupting our ant way of life and going | broad to sell our ideals. Until we | faced dire emergency, many of us not even willing to come to| shington to serve our govern-| ment. It takes men with both ideals and willingness to risk death to| carry our concept of the diginity | of man into some parts of Europe. | Once that concept gets behind the | Iron Curtain, the danger of war But we have not realized | this. Or, if we have, we have not worked at it hard enough. While we have worked toward a better world here at home, we have not entirely realized that in this modern day of A-bombs and trans-Atlantic rockets, this is not enough. WINDSHIELD STICKERS HERE Windshield stickers for automo- biles have arrived, C. L. Popejoy, Juneau City Clerk, announced to- day. There are three types, those for trucks, taxis and cars. This is a $5 car license for out-of-town cars using Juneau streets regularly. UP OVER YEAR AGO | November | while total air mail carried exceed. |ler, R. E. Shupp, Mr. and Mrs. Ray (CIVIL SERVICE UPS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA December 26 Mrs. W. E. Hendrickson Joanne Lucas Juanita L. Colwell Rodger Pegues W. G. Hellan Margaret Clark Bessie Wallace Adriane T. Langer e o o 0 0 o 0 PNA REPORTS BUSY| NOVEMBER; TRAFFIC Pacific Northern Airlines Juneau traffic for November of this year | substantially exceeded that a year ago, according to Robert P. Pheas- ant, PNA district traffic manager. Passenger traffic between Juneau and Anchorage, Cordova and Yak-* utat increased 37 percent over 1949, he said. Cargo traffic totals for; ingreased 76 pereent ed 1949 totals by 35 percent. The system plane load factor for Novemker of this year was 60.9 percent compared with 1949 load factor of 492 percent. Revenue passengers carried by PNA on all| routes increased 24 percent. System traffic totals for the air- line during the eleven months period ending November 1950 re- flect healthy gains over the same period in 1949, Pheasant revealed. Air cargo poundage was up 37 per- cent from 945234 in 1949 to 1,290,- 934 in 1950. Revenue passem,er9| were up 23 percent, from 19,909 ml 24,472, Passenger miles also in- creased from 2504,000 in 1949 to 10,191,000 ip 1950, a rise of 18 per- cent, ] TRAVEl WITH PM SATURDAY, MONDAY Pacific Nc.thern Airlines brought 16 passengers from Anchorage Sat- | westward points. Planes were can- | celled out today due to weather and | field conditions. From Anchorage: Eva and Easl Spofford, A. Hoognn A. Peerolli, B. Schultz, Judge Folta, M. Maynard, M. Jensen, J. Bovard, Joe Alimon- rong, Bruce Baptist, M. W. Reed, G. Converse, S. Stinger, Richard Johns and Bill Reed. To Anchorage: O. C. Dwyer, C. T. Maning, Frank Young, Jr. and Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Jason Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Ludtke, Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Hill, Georgie Smith, T. S. Bachelder, R. E. Sheldon, M. Stick- Renshaw, Charles McKenzie, Pacri- cia Cowles and Lee Bettinger. To Cordova: Jim Holmas, Martin Samuelson, Jose Christan. | To Yakutat: Bernad Henniger and John Makay. EMPLOYEES 31,500 EXECUTIVEBRANCH ‘WASHINGTON, Dec. 26 — | Civilians working in the Executive | branch of the Federal government | numbered 2,160,000 on Dec. 1. The Civil Service Commission re- ported yesterday that the 31,500 in- crease over Nov. 1 was mostly due to hiring by the Defense Depart- ment. :Crossword Puzzle: ACRASS sailors . Polynesian chestnut Roam 12th U. 8. president Qrg!te?&n eral . Forbid Allow 8. Name for office . Added numbers Kind of beer 48. Former Amerlcan statesman . Shoshonean Indian Italian guess- ing game . An English queen . Stitch . Goddess of discord East Africa . Liquor . Toward the sheltered . Lom: “arinks: llog. /// M o . fll%flll//////// Ilfll flfl,fll= / Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle Eg gvull efore 57. Since: Scotch DOWN 1. Strikes gently 2. Afresh 3. One who lives in a place 4. Former publio conveyance . Sunken fence . Flood Scene of actlon Delicate nament o of light Roman road Observed . Wild plum . Pronoun n 3 indebted to Broad shallow ! deferred two hours on Christmas Day to permit members of her crew | to enjoy their Christmas dinner at their homes here. | Hospital to have the injured member x-rayed and set. =§ Daily Lessons in English % 1. corbon 20 YEARS AGO 5% DECEMBER 26, 1930 The spirit of Christmas spread over Jureau and it was a gladsome and merry day December 25. Services were held in the churches Christ- mas Eve and morning and Sunday School programs with Santa Claus appearing on the scenes were held. The day was widely observed in Juneau homes with the gathering of families and friends for dinners and open house. Carolers, under the direction of Mrs. W. C. Ellis sang in the hospitals. At the United States jail the 31 prisoners were treated to turkey and “all the trimmings” and were generously supplied with cigars, cigarettes and pipe tobacco. HE EHPIRE The departure of the mailboat Estebeth for Sitka and wayports was Production of a musical comedy, “The Beauty Shop,” early in Feb- ruary was announced by the Elks Lodge, and plans were being made for the selection of a cast of local talent. Rudy Pusich of Douglas had the misfortune to sustain a broken wrist while cranking his car. The young lad was taken to St. Ann's One hundred and twelve thousand pounds of frozen fish were for- warded from Juneau and virtually all of the shipment was destined for the East Coast of the United States and Europe. The shipment included salmon and halibut. Weather: High, 42; low, 33; rain. S WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “We expect lots more busi- ness in the spring.” It is much better to say, We expect MUCH more business in the spring.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Fortuitous. Pronounce for-tu- i-tus, O as in FOR, first U as in USE, I as in IT unstressed, accent second syl- lable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Presumptuous; observe the PTU. SYNONYMS: Everyday, customary, conventional, habitual, routine. 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: CENTENARIAN; a person a hundred years old. (Pronounce first A as in CARE; principal accent follows the R). | MODERN ETIQUEITE Yommra rm S e ) Q. When you are a member of a-little group of friends, and some- one begins a story you have already heard, is it proper to interject, “I've heard that one before”? A. This is exceedingly rude, as you are not only throwing the story- teller off-balance, but you are also spoiling the story for the otherl listeners. It is much better to appear interested and act as though| you had not already heard the story. Q. To whom should a bride show preference, if any, in choosing her maid-of-honor? A. The bride’s sister usually has preference. then the bride chooses her most intimate friend. Q. What would be an appropriate toast for a guest to offer to his tost? A. “To a real friend, a royal entertainer, a sterling companion, and a regular fellow—our host.” ;Lom( and LEARN % ¢ compon T ] 1. Of what in the medicinia world was Wilhelm K. Roentgen the discoverer? 2. To what animals do the following terms refer: (a) equine, (b) canine, (¢) bovine, (d) feline? 3. What word ends 24 of the 27 Books of the New Testament? 5. What is a hoyden? 5. What does “adagio’ mean in music? ANSWERS: The X-ray. (a) Horse, (b) dog, (¢) cow, (d) cat. “Amen.” A rude, bold girl; a tomboy. Slowly. usual, - If there is no sister, There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! ° PHONE Red 372 unglus 364 Glacier Constructon Co. GENERAL CONTRACTORS New Building — Remodeling — Cabinet Work Safe Electrical Pipe Thawing and Welding EDWIN SUTTON as a paid-ap subscriber tv THE VAILY ALASEA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Pmumtbi:mpontoflnboxdfloaot and recefve TWO TICKETS to see: “ADVENTURES OF GALLANT BESS” Federal Tux—12c Pald by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phene 22 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name lly _Appear! Oldest Bank in Alaska 1881—0Over Hall a Cenlury of Banking—1950 The B. M. Behrends Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS land 4. Deinglisy TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1950 Weather at Alaska Points ‘Weather conaitions ana temper- atures at various Alaska points also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 am., 120th »Mcoidian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follows: Anchorage Annette Island Barrow Bethel ... Cordova Dawson Edmonton Fairbanks .. Haines ... Havre ... Juneau Airport .. Kodiak Kotzebue McGrath Nome .. Northway .. Petersburg . Portland Prince George Seattle Sitka ‘Whitehorse Yakutat WOMEN OF MOOSE HOLD CHRISTMAS PARTY, MEETING The Women of the Moose, Chap- ter 439, held its meeting and an- nual Christmas party Thursday evening at the Moose Lodge hall Senior Regent Beatrice Albegoff in- itiated the following candidates for Moosehaven Chapter night: Lor- aine Mix, Doreen Anderson and Emma Elsie Hatlin, The Senior Regent announced the following committee reports were due on January 4, 1951; publicity, Mooseheart, library, Moosehaven and membership. At the close of . 43—Cloudy -19—Fog 28—Fog 40—Ram 6—Cloudy . 8—Cloudy .. 31—Snow 13—Cloudy 33—Fog ... 37—Drizzle lB—Fartly Cloudy .. 12—Cloudy 30—Cloudy -10—Cloudy 35—Cloudy 36—Fog 27—Cloudy . 39—Fog .+ 36—Cloudy 18—Blowing Snow 37—Rain the meeting, Christmas carols were ii sung. Christmas presents were ex- changed along with the box lunch- es. RIZAL DAY (ELEBRATED AT BARANOF SATURDAY The Filipino Community and Auxiliary will commemorate the 54th anniversary of Dr. Jose Rizal with a banquet, program and dance at the Baranof Hotel at 7 o'clock Saturday evening. Philippine Vike Consul Pedro Ramirez of Seattle has been in- vited to give the main address. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS WALT HATLIN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Experienced House Wiring Electrical Marine Repair Phone Red 290 Juneau, Alaska V.F . W. Taku Post No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.1.0. Hall at 8:00 p.m. The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery Phone 104 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS’® LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR / Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 Casler’s Men's Wear MoGregor Spertswear BOTANY llm CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT 31—Cloudy | 6—Partly Cloudy | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 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 Wednesday at & PM. Visiting brothers welcome WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. —_— | Mcose Lodge Ne. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN Brownie's Liquor Store Phene 163 153 Bo. Frankile ?. O. Box 2550 S i "The Rexall Store" Your Rellabie Fharmaista BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Husic Sup; Arthur M. Uggen, Meansger Planos—Musical Instruments and SBupplies ~Phone 206 _Second and Bewantl {, GENEF PAINTS PAPER i | and WALL | i 8 m... e!u‘“ ! 549 #red W. Wends s, 8056 10th 83 16—DAY eor NIGHT Whalesale I PHBONX -J‘ for MIXERS er BODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Booms at Beaconsble Mates PHO: E BINGLE G PHONE 655 Thomas Hardware (o, PAINTS — OILB Bullders’ and Shel HARDWARE Remington Typewrite BOLD and svmpun)‘ tym J. B. Burford Co. “Onr Doorsiep Is Worn by Batisfied Custorers” FORD AGENCY (Authcrized Dealera) GREASES — GAS — omn, Juneau Moior Co. Foot of Main Bireet MARE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM & dally habit—ask for i by natse Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SHO® Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Store—Tel 699 American Meat — Phone 3§ 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 e ——— BLACKWELL'’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone 773 13—PHONES—49 Pres Delivery High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or 8: ¥ -

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