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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Publmmd every evening except Sunday by the COMPANY Juneau, Alaska EMPIRE PRINTING Second and Main Stree! HELEN TROY MONSEN - - DOROTHY TROY LINGO = - ELMER A. FRIEND - = = = not action emergency.” - President Then the - Vice-President |, Managing Editor | that stitutes a betrayal Botered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Deltvered by carrier in Juncau and Douclas six months, $8.00; one year, By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: ance, $15.00; stx months, in advance, $7.50; | Ome year, In ome month, in advance, $1.50. Bubscribers will confer a favor if they the Business Office of any fallure or irregularity in the dellvery | of their papers. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, for $1.50 per month; | $15.00 the United States cept of will promptly notify i “The doctrine MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published berein. Alaska, creating affri NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Seattle, Wash. Yourth Avemue Blds., hemispher.” Tuesday, January 9, Anchorage. AP correspondent newspaper. Now, with other Anway 1951 GOOD (?) START ON STATEHOOD BILL Well the Alaska Statehood Committee which met in the first session at Anchorage last Saturday should feel proud of its work, we do not think. The calendar of business was to include discus- sions of the statehood movement and the fate of the The Committee was to consider whether a research program should be information that enabling act in the last Congress. planned at this time, to compile would be useful in drawing a state constitution. research program is a part of the responsibility of the committee under the act of the 1949 created the committee. Well, the committee went into action immediately and passed a long resolution denouncing Senator Rus- sell, Democrat, of Georgia, chairman of the Senate Yes sir, going into reesarch program at one quick jump. The 's anti-statehood stand which it labeled as a “proposed hoisting of a white flag in the face of the Red flag.. quoted the Senator as having said, during the state- hood debate in the Senate last month, that he did Armed Services Committee. committee denounced the Senator’ only pre: which to draw resolution is the taxpayers’ Perhaps but the resolution impression. The Incidentally, legislature which and Hawaii, were this is certainly " The resolution House during this favor statehood “will fix an obligation on the ernment to defend their rights in case “this unprecedented and is counter to pledges, principles and traditions of equality under Alaska are conscripted for armed service, pay all Fed- eral taxes and perform privilege of full representaton in Congres. | an exodus of some of its citizens, an hting of investment capital and widespread dis couragement of Ala a bulwark of democracy Now, dear reader, do not t Empire is opposed to statehood at the present time that we are taking a ride on the committee’ The story regarding the resolution, haps the only work done at-the first day’s se the committee, was an Associated Press dispatch from Presumably tr on the staff of the Anchorage Times, Statehood Committee and the scorching of the Senator from Georgia presumably had his sanction, of course wellknown Alaskans, the resolution presumably was satisfactory work of the committee a lease made. Now, we all know the committee has a fund upon for the only work of the committee, it appears money has been badly today, from Anchorage regarding Press wires in the States and sertdinly gives a ba We condemn opportunity to vote on the sta another to The Empire yesterday told of the fact that Senate |t Bills Nos. 49 and 50, Democrat of Wyoming. duced, eliminates a previous provision forbidding the Interior Department to create any additional native reservations, pending statehood. | rw ] because that Federal Gov- of any great for the territories committee’s resolution goes on to say con- a declaration of * policy of the American citizens of and a violation of the basic con- | which American citizens of duties without the | all other already has spread great alarm in | aska’s effort to build up Alaskg int and defense for the western k that because The s work per- ion of which w sent by the s presumably Bob Atwood's Atwood is chairman of the Alaska ispatch at Anchorage, who poval. the only this was Hml givin transportation,. etc., but if the spent. | may be another dispatch; the work of the committee, ! was broadcast ov: ver the Associ there those who will have a ood bill. Associated Press dispatch | granting statehood to Alas introduced by Senator O’Mahoney The Alaska bill, as intro- | An AP dispatch also saia the Hawaii statehood bill was'introduced in the House last week by Dele- gate Farrington of Hawaii. pected to introduce the Algska statehood bill in the Delegate Bartlett is ex- present week. The Washingfon Merry-Go-Round ’ (Continued from Page One) | ing in the surf, very scantily at- tired. It would be a simple process to take his outsbretched hand and; place tHE Hand"8f a 'Tewd" Wonfan ' in his, against the backdrop of a south sea isle, That's what this type of campaigning is coming to,” Anderson argued. Connally Nexft ‘Then he turned to Tom Connally of Texas and said: “You know, Senator Connally, the campaign is already on down in Texas to prove you are a Communist coddler, be- cause you didn't stand up against Dean Acheson.” Turning to Sen, Dick Russell ot! Georgia, he remarked: “In the Maryland campaign, Tydings was charged with the loss of American | lives in Korea. In the future that| sort of comment and criticism, no‘\ matter how unfair and unjust, will | be heaped on Senator Russell who | is taking Tyding’s place as chair- man of the Armed Services Com- mittee.” At this point, Connecticut’s Sen.| Brien McMahon waved a copy or‘ “Common Sense,” a Fascist publi- cation which had been used in the campaign against him. One head- | line screamed: “McMahon—Com- munist dupe,” and the arjicle under it inferred that the Senator was guilty of treason and had helped to leak atomic secrets to the Russians—both viciously untrue. | “I beat it boys, but maybe you can't in 1952 McMahon warned.| Iowa’s Sen. Guy Gillette, Lhau-‘ man of the elections committee,| reported that his committee had| Just uncovered some last-minute | information on Butler's finances| that “revealed a scandalous sltua-} tion” in Maryland. He explained | that the investigation wasn't far‘ enough along to bar Butler from | taking his seat, but that the Sen-: ate parliamentarian had advised | the committee that Butler could be | ousted later by a majority vote. J Note—The tabloid featuring thef fake Tydings-Browder photo was held in a Baltimore print shop until Jean Kerr, secretary to Sen- ator McCarthy, brought $2,400 in checks to the printer to pay for -distribution. Later Don Surine, Mc- Carthy’s assistant, took the Balti- more printer, William H. Fedder, for an all-night ride in an attempt to make him surrender a letter from candidate Butler which ap- peared to be in violation of the corrupt practices act. High Cost of Politics | In Pennsylvania, Sen. Anderson also pointed out, an estimated $2,- 000,000 had been spent in the Sen- atorial campaign. “However, the cost of living has gone up in poli- tics,” he added, “and it wasn't spent for slanderous literature.” Anderson also remarked that the “campaign in Utah was as vicious | as the one against Tydings,” that “horrible publications” were put out against Elbert Thomas, but | cesstul candidate, Wallace Bennett, | that southerners might not agree | took the floor at the end of the| declared Tydings. | colleagues, !is not Speaker Sam Rayburn, | learns the ropes. had directed this campaign. In reply to newspaper comment to bar Butler of Maryland on the grounds of states’ rights, Anderson quoted a speech by Senator George of Georgia on Jan. 17, 1828, when he opposed the seating of Sen- ator Vare of Pennsylvania on the grotnd that it was up to Congress to pass upon its own membership and that the states had given permission for Congress to investi- gate Federal elections. After Anderson finished quoi- | ing him, George took the rlour‘ and recalled having made the 1928 | speech, He also added that he| hadn’t changed his mind. “We shouldn't pass on the Mary- land case by early and one-sided | arguments, but we have an obli- gation to look into it,” advised George. Tydings Bows Out Senator Tydings himself finally secret caucus, He insisted that he would not contest the election, that he had spent 28 years in Congress, was tired, and deserved a rest. He remarked, however, that he had| been swamped with letters and| telegrams from Maryland voters who had voted against him, but| had changed their minds after | learning what had actually hap- | pened. “These messages clearly indicate | that if the election were held -t morrow, I would sweep the stats But he insisted again that *“unless stern duty de- mands, I do not intend to go bactk into government.” By the time the caucus wound up, not a voice was raised against the idea of making the Maryland case an example. Note—Anderson and Gillette botn charged in the secret caucus that Senator McCarthy, Chicago Tri- bune, Washingn Times-Herald and/ radio commfntator Fulton Lewis had “actively p\rbicipaled"‘ in the smear campaign, Vashington Pipeline The swanky new upholstery in the House chamber—brown leather seats on the flo plush divans in the cloakrooms—doesn't impress plain-talking GOP Rep. Usher Bur- | dick of North Dakota. . .“Don't let this stuff fool you,” Burdick tells “These new seats will be just as hard to hang on to as the old ones when election day rolls around.”. Real Boss of the House in the New Congress who nominally holds the reins, but Rep. Howard “Wing-Collar” Smith o Virginia, who cracks the®whip over the Dixiecrat-GOP cdalition Able, sober-sided Rep, Jere Cooper of Tennessee caused chuckles at a caucus of House Democrats with this barb at his Illinois colleague, Adolph Sabath, whose 44 years in the House is the longest in his- |tory: “The gentleman is a new- comer, so I hope you boys will help him to find his way around till he that there was no evidence the suc-| WANT AVS BKING EESULTS I New Bill for ! Navy Building Is Introduced WASHINGTON, Jan. 9 — (& new $2,000,000,000 Navy shipbuild-! ing pro m, including a so-called super aircraft carrier, was outlin-| ed teday in a bill introduced in the House by Rep. Vinson (D-Ga)., Vinson, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said the bill bore the approval of both| the Defense Department and the| { Budget Bureau, and could be con-| sidered an “Administration Bill.” The new program contemplates major additions to the combat fleet. | In addition to the outsize carrie; authority is provided for construc- | tion of more than 80 vessels, an| for modernization and conversioX | of 250 existing ships. ° o ily. . . The Fremmings are former Ju- . TIDE TABLE e | neau residents and have many| . o | friends here. School classes keep . January 10 o | their young son David in Pelican | |® High tide 3:51 aum, 17.4 ft. li!mt he plans a visit to Juneau Low tide 9:39 am., 21ft. e ‘ this spring, | High tide 3:38 p.m. 186 ft. ®| PR M S e Low tide 10:09 p.m., -26 ft. ! EASTERN STAR © o o o o o o o o o Annual business meeting, Ju-| [ | neau Chap. No, 7, Tuesday, Janu- Sewing machines for rent at|ary 9, 8 oclock. 702--2t | Marie’s Sewing Center, 702-tf | ALICE BROWN, Secretary, | ceeeecoecece THE DAILY HNEASINESS The h sent last week to 30 ki munist U.N. E WASHIN .l'U!\‘ J:m. 9— tary, January 9 ALASKA EMPIRE--JUN AU, ALASKA 20 ‘(EARS AGO fi% mmeire JANUARY 9, 1931 Two | ts, representing the first trophies of the 1930-31 bas- ketball 1 won by the Douglas High boys’ team in the recent jhoop tourr 1t Haines had been received by Coach Lloyd Rinden | The Dou 1ad been declared the champions of the Lynn Canal Marvin Lee Nelson, Don Abel Marshall Er Mrs. Irene McKinley Mrs. Rosina Staveland Clara Marshall Bessie Kelly Mrs. T. W. Rowell s 0o 00 00 0 Jr. es9e000060 itest United S sState Department proposals in a mu Com- y non member capitals. AUCH LARGER AF PLANNED; McCONE l 1 1 P—John McCone, Air Force Undersec id today the service is plar | | | ning warplane output for a forc much larger than the 84 group | the present program. |in | He did not specify the l‘umbor posed but told a news | M that the n e to| 0,000 men under a plan.- | ned for all fighti mean a COITesy g rise in the! Air Force. | Mr. Pel the next week or mi; of vacation vis Mrs. | Einard Davis and her S ARE VISITORS Fi0M PELIC \‘\I’ and Mrs. Elliott Fr»m:—ning[ n are Juneau visitors for ten days. Frem- ng who is manager of the gen-! store at Pelican is on a short it with Mrs. Fremming'’s momerI David Davis, her brother; sister Mrs. ard Dull and the latter’s fam=; ACROSS 36. Cluster of 1. Mountain in fibers in wool 38. Single thins 9. Roman date 4l 14. Shelter for small 43 animals 15. Joint of the 45. Serious in r DUrDOSE 17, 48. Carpenter's 18, 49. hought- 19. 21 50. 4. Bohemian religious reformer 54. Portended 55, Toward the sheltered side poch Crystal gazer . Ogle 32, P asses 1o . Condensed 4. Cooked fn an atmosphere oven molsture 5. Entire DOWN 6. Genus of | shrubs | . Annoy a . Put on 4. Entertained < 1ol o Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle “Inside ot . Slopes 27. Finial of & sire 29. Dillseed %. Olfactory 33. 34, Biblical | mountain 37 F ‘ormal vrocession 40 Began to grow m.'n‘ln the morning 42. Bu ether 45, Diminshes A 46, Drug-yielding 4% Compouna {A as in AT, E as iner PEREMPTORY “His peremptory command ; MODERN ETIQUETTE Q.- When a man is leaving his name with a business friend’s secretary she can have her employer telephone him, should he give it as 50 t Mr. the sold ! true, and it must follow as night the day |Junjor and £ ms. Officers installed to serve for the next year for Silver Bow Lo | No. A2, 1. O. O, :s W. Carter, District Deputy Grand Ma | ere: Ernest A. Johnson, Noble Grand; O, Eikiand, Vice-Grand; E V. Brown, Recording Secretary; Charles W. Carter, Financial Sec tary; and John Reck, Treasurer. A prize of a season’s pass to the Palace Theatre was being offer by L. H. Kubley for a new name for the playhouse. The theatre w 1e was also in order. Contes a new Juneau on the Northwestern for Mrs. H. G. Watson, Mrs. Arthur Frolar issengers leaving and Mrs. J. V. Davis, VVOI‘DS OFTEN MIS iD: Do not say, “What did you do that for?” “WHY did you do that?” :N MISPRONOUNCED: Blasphemy. in ME unstressed, I as in IT, accent first syllable. L. argue, LED: Apparel; two P’s, one Dispute (verb), debate, contend, “Use a word three times and it is yours by mastering one word each day. appeal; OFTEN :'] SYNONY! WORD STUDY: ease our vocabular, wrangl of debate or ] ROBERTA LEE Robert Gordon, Robert Gordon, or just plain Gordon? the full name with the title. a bridge game, is it proper A, The proper procedure is to giv Q. When asked to cut the cards in branches will | complete the cut by returning all cards to one pile? A. Yes, this is the most courteous procedure. Q. Should the hostess at a cocktail party .wait until all her guests Mave arrived before serving the drink: A. No, this isn't at all necessg B e lOOK and LEARN ; £ C. GORDON 1. What was' the most famous national British government? 3. What is the difference between a naiad and a dryad? 4, What ancient Roman was great as ier and statesman? 5. What famous line frgm Hamlet follows: “To " ANSWERS: 1. The Olympic Games. 2. South Carolina. 3. A naid is a water nymph, and a dryad is a wood nymph. 4 5. Julius Caesar. “Thou canst not then be false to any man.” nts were limited to or ec 2 |to be opened soon after being renovated and redecorated and Kubley | | felt ne Seattl nd or 8 je t f | Arthur Froland, . Britt, US.N., Loui§ Kann, Royal She ] {ard, and R LONDON, Jan. § — (» — 3,-,[,“"} Juneau High School basketball teams were the losers in game: took the view toc that the non- |played against the Douglas High School. The Douglas girls’ team w Commu world can hardly brand [by a score Of 15 to 12 and the Douglas boys won the boys' game by s Red China an ageressor in Korea |2].12 score until all United ts to | SRS |obtain a cease-fire I-fl | e-organization of the American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps This was disclosed as qualified | 3. ;509 on at the regular meeting of the local Legion Post. Walte TOpOC L) Ko vho was drum major at Chilkoot Barracks at one time, w Premiers were considering whether : 3 . ; to sponsor a new UN. bid to end | to head the corps. At the "“‘“f"" plans were nlsov mace for the L« the Korean war. Mixer be held Janua the Dugout. New Post Command Even this move fails, best-in- |J. T. Petrich presided for the first time. formed opinion here suggests | e fitain and several of her Com- | To begin another intensive search for Pilot Renahan and his partners will shrink rvions, Sam Clerf and Frank Hatcher, missing since October RS ing some of the steps en- Anscel Eckmann and his mechanic, Frank Wadham, flew visaged by the United tes 10| annette Island to make that point his base. He intended to continue Auniah Red Ohinieg: 8 & that | yhe search until the fate of the three missing men was learned. the consequénces to y could | Wi A "“\C“m!‘].l.lx:vl;nm i s g Weather: High, 87; low. 36; cloudy. . Apparent ish unwillingness to S O g e 642 e, o along with a punitive American i v\_\ 1ey i h policy srwasds MACDs Jasiaviod Ually Lessons in qu 1S w L. GORDON zeneral West European ur S Pronounce blas-fe-mi, ” Let us Today's word: decisive; absolute, tc festival of the ancient and the two are here t0c ooxs which has been carried down to present time? 2. What American colony first raised a military force to oppose an author, orator, scholar, thine own self be BAY BOLTON as a paid-ap subscriber 1o THE VAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and recetve TWO TICKETS to see: TW0 WEEKS WITH LOVE"” Federal Tax—12c Pai¢ 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 Appenrl._' Oldest Bank in Alaska 1291—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The B, M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS - 1 ‘ { TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1951 Weather af Alaska Poinis Weather conamons ana telnncb' abures at various Alaska vmm also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:3 : um.,, 120th 2f:3idian Time, ::H‘L“ eleased o0y .ie Weather Bureau | re as foliows: ! Anchorage 27—Snow ! Annette Island 41—Rain | Barrow -29—Snow | Bethel » e =8N OW | Cordova 82— uu Dawson 2—Cloudy Edmonton 21—Partly Cloudy | Fairbanks 3—Snow 34—Partly Cloudy | 1a 13—Clear Juneau Airport 33—Rain, Snow| Kodiak 26—Partly Cloudy | otzebue -8—Clear | feGrath 7—Snow r| way rshurg nd 39—l George 4 34—Partly Cloudy 35—Rain Clo RUSSIANS ATTEND | JOINT SESSION, | HEAR PRES, TALK WASHINGTON, Jan. 9 — nall Russian du‘)lumam m the House chambers to President Truman's attack on soviet pol in his State of the Union Message. Efforts to ine the identity of the Russians were not immed-| iately successful. | The State Department said that on January 2 a ticket w sent o Ambassa exander S. Pany- ne with all other The‘n on ed for another ticket, for an In- terpreter, and 'named Georgi F. Potrovsky, attache, as the man toj use it. The ticket The Russians did not ¢ names at the Capitol. provided. { ve their| YOUNGS OF HAID RETURN FROM WESTWARD nd Mrs, Frank Young and oung son of Haines returned the weekend from Anchorage Alaska Coastal Airlines) for their home. They have been isiting friends in the westward | city. Mi Young is the ayor »f Haines. WM.T HATLIN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Experienced House Wiring Electrical Marine Repair Phone Red 355 Juneau, Alaska Mr. their over and left by V.F. W. Taku Post Ne. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. m The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery Phone 194 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Near Third Street The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth. and Franklin Bts. PHONE 136 Casler’s Men's Wear MoGregor Sportswear Btetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes BOTANY nsool" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Cempiete Outfitter for Men SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT 5 PHONES 4% Free > MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE N, 1471 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month ln Scottish Rite T'emple | beginning at 7:30 p. - Carson A. Lawrenoce ’ | Worshipful Master; | JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary, €3 B.P.0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome. WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. e e HMcose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN Brownie's Liquor Sfore Pheme 183 139 So. Frankilm P. O. Box 2598 "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmaiste BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies .Fhone 206 .Second and Seward_ GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Pain! Store Phone 548 Fred W. Wendas Card Beverage Cs. Wholesale 805 10th Ss. PEONE 216—DAY er NIGHT for MYXFRS or BODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Boouss st Reasonable Ratew PHONE BINGLE O PHONE 565 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS —— OILS Drilders’ and Shel? HARDWARE Remington Typewriters BOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “QOur Doorstep Is Worn by Eatisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GRFEASES — GAS — OIL Junean Moter Co. PFoot of Main Street MARE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM & daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dalries, Inc. Chrysler Marine Enginer MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Ligquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 Yo Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVIS OVERALLS for Boys BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. # . ' > { LR = . ) ) . b K o . o [ » 4 “ y B ! ) . P " i > N \€0 [ Ky i 3 v e L} | | e S LR o ol vl ol K N K of - o o«jn [} B s wp w o Pl