The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 7, 1951, Page 4

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. . Their pay — oh yes, that is another thing. If . : SU T weike Shtaie b BiEsy BT 6 bout §2. Tf they just answer the alarm and a fire EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY extinguisher will do the job, the pay is about $1. How Second and Main Streels, Juneau, Alaska % HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - - President | about 1ing a suit of clc s in fighting roaring s, MR NGO | . = - TosPresidert | flames? That is another thing, up to the individual e | How about keeping up the ball park? How about ®atered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. g ; et SUBSCRIPTION RATES: many other features the fire boys are leaders in Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for 175 per month d just for instance, .suppose one e vs is ireiec fn Jeoean and Doarias for §1 And just for instance, suppose one of the boys i By mail, postage paid, at the following Fates: injured that means hospitalization.. Who is to pay One A vance, $15.00; st lonths, v 3 50 P 5 v e o8 oz, 1o advance, $16.00; six months, in advanoe, $%.80; | ror (nat? You would be surprised if you knew the Bubscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notifs | tyuth, the Business Office of any fallure or irregularity in the delivery k4 L e Now we come right down to bottom talk. The of their papers. Tel.phones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. boys are giving the annual ball next Saturday night in the Elks Ballroom. This is their night for raising a fund for their y expenses. The least one can do is to purchase at least one ticket, make it Before the night is over, you m s0 let us support Remember the d night in the 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- nm credited in this paper and also the local news published rein. many, many two, or three. have cause to seek their aid NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Yourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. important cause of the fire boys and the purpose — next Saturday Ballroom. Shortage of Worker (Washington Post) When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, 3.5 million Americans were unemployed, the defense boom that preceded our entry into the war having brought Nine years later, the Department of Commerce re- 1 of unemployed workers was 3,229,~ orts, the to 7 100, and the number of employed workers had risen | Wednesday, February 7, 1951 rom 52 million to 60.3 million. After allowing for and t ary idleness due to em- seasonal declines THAT 2-9 ALARM of people are looking for jobs. Were you ever awakened at 2 or 3 o'clock in the As Secretary Sawyer says, the latest figures “point morning, the Taku howling and temperature at 10| up some of the problems now confronting us with above, by that fire alarm 2-92 You just wondered regard to stretching our manpower resources to meet both military commitments and the increased re- what it could be—a man, woman or child missing or a fire outside the city limits. The alarm was for sum- moning aid to the fire hall. Then you thought, “Well the fire boys are there and they will attend to whateve: (uirements of growing population.” In other words nore women and older men must be recruited for work ores and factories, working hours will have to d by means in s se lengthened, and productivity incre is the cause of the alarm,” and you turn over, snuggle | \e tochnological improvements and introduction of Abwhy 60 to ‘sleep again, new labor-saving devices, That is just that—members of the Juneau Vol- e unteer Fire Department, they answered the alarm. “Drunkenness is a istic vice,” asserts a sleepir or inclement weather doesn't bother them, | Russian publication It is no vice, of course, for the 2-9 meant something and they were out of beds|the Russian comrade to get soused to the gills on and hurrying to the fire hall for whatever duty was| vodka. demanded. e The Juneau.Fire Department is composed of men If you need something new to worry about, you in all walks of life. Several have families, and they might chew on this a while: A German scientist work rts of employment but are always |says the sun is becoming hotter, and that eventually the oceans will boil o matter what alarm is sounded. on the call, czar Charles E. Wilson. . .Demo- The Washington cratic Chairman Bill Boyle got bit miffed at first when Price Pot- lo(ATED TH'S A M_ Me"y-GO'Round entate Mike Di Salle told a Con- | 5 gressional Committee: “Therc is| (Continued from Page One) such an immediate need for em-| What may have been intended | S LA i ployees that I may even have to|'© be a practical joke could have would rather go cown with my|Dire some Democrats.” Boyle didn't pad serious ponsequences if Police flag nailec to the masthead, fight- |Teslize Di Salle was kidding. (Di f\-ul 4111!f1"-“'|l:1f"- SE reraon. ing for what T believe in,” he em- |Salle claims that the actual ratio thak. Sek,, SN Loalhingss (2 st “Those we are helping|Of Demcorals hited ls- sboul 36 station wagon this moming B Siiow the saarns epiuit. { percent ¢rainst 6: vercent Repub- ); \\Af)!fl\lt his permission. i { | lieags) i | Peartaree had left his car with AW G a8 tofd fie ofsed-toor we y the moter idling for a few minutes meeting that Marshal Zhukov, i [in front of the s Bowl. When former Soviet commandant in Ber-| Along u e Potoma: —Wartime bu- lin, was in bad with the Kremlin, | reaucrats are flocking back to apparently because of a too-friend- hington by the thou is. A Wa 1y attitude toward western powers | quarter of a million civilians h; been added to the fede t Seward Street at the J Hardware Store corn neau-Y » | He vel oung “Back in the days when T knew | already Tide. him, Zhukov was hand-in-glove |Payroll and another 500000 may| “rhe car was discovered this with Stalin,” Fisenhower said. “But | be taken on by 1952. . .The kicking| p\ooning by M, L. MacSpadden be- the last I heard of him, he was|around given Sen. Margaret Smith|ping tne Juneau Cold Storage plant. n an old Ford that|of Maine by Jumpin’ Joe McCarthy has got a lot of Senators Byrd of Virginia gave Mrs. Smith| e :])oimlcd support by publicly pr‘;\l;-‘[ While Tke was stressing the im- |08 DeF views on econamy, Wi 'e portance of sea and air power, GOP | Pat M“(‘”’:‘_‘” ”{_N“‘»"d" b (f()_l’.l Rep. Carroll Reece of Tenessee in- Wherry: ‘I wauld:Like ‘yery B (HAMBER MEET THURS. | leader quired if he wasn’t “minimizing”| to have Mrs. Smith as a migh Bob Ellis, temporary President of the importance of the foot soldier. [ {1t was undamaged. BOB ELLIS T0 TALK AT riding around i could use a repair job.” | member of my committee investi-| {je 1ska Visitors Association, will g S -Constantine| po sheaker at a regular luncheon ) shington Star’s For-| yeeting of the Juneau Chamber eign Editor, has gone in for dom-| ¢ commerce tomorrow at the Bar- at any time as minimizing the res. ponsibility and ability of the dough boy,” Esenhower replied quickly. “No fight has ever been won with- | ferring with Dolores Bridges, Wile| gent has announced. out him. The Air Force and the|Of the New Hampshire Senator, o0\ Members here for meetings of | Navy get the cheers, but the dough- | ¥ays and means of kicking out|ine Agsociation are also invited | : genial Guy Gabrielson as chair- g | b et the white crosses in the : | to attend. ovE. E e man of the Republican National | ground.” C‘ i 5 4 B ‘b T‘ ;[ zel’l | In cognizance of Boy Scout Week, ommittee. .Sen. O al S ;@ X ) : { the Boy Scout acting mayor and At one point when he felt that p 8 ~Carthyv’s | & 3 > friends that McCarthy's Senate| oouncilmen will be guests of the he was growing preachy, Ike grin-| speeches are chiefly for the pur-| cpamuer ned: “If I sound philosophical, DI‘N,S o m_“crmg el ° bur- | Chamber just remember that I have been 2| engagements. Joe's fee has now gone YARUTAT VISIZOR golisge President ~ lup to $1,000. . The White House| Ray §. Banta with the CAA at But he didn't sound like a college | picked one of the toughest 1aW-| yakutat is a Juneau visitor, president a moment later, when, vers in the east to enforce price | stressing the importance of \Amlv | control—*Jiggs” Donohue, the mnn‘ ANOROE AT \'ISITOR ithour European allies, he said: |y J sty 2 : wil P! ‘nho convicted Harry Bridges of C. G. Abernathy of Anchorage is “We'd be in a hell of a fix perjury. Prediction: Therell be less black marketeering this time than last. stopping at the Hotel Juneau. Then he apologized to C: S women Frances Bolton of Ohio s Edna Kelly of New York. One Congressman, alluding Ike's statement that the European| | — | 1 Backstage with the Diplomats—| people were “determined” to carry | oo Ashgson has ' hoah acra el ACROSS 32. Shovel he fight ainst Communism | blazes at taa British, especfally| 1. Permit 34, American on :&emg m:g‘m;mn S0 | Foreign Minister Bevin, for hang-| & Lump SR ;:kfl L linal rieniber| 8 bacE on cling Red Ohina for B Eelis Sabthate a. 2. ; ather | o o ovessi 0 B .| 12 Exist - broke in to answer the question | ageression. In one off-record ses-} OE]:N of 39, Fisherman i h 1 '('hivflv respor.- sion, Acheson exploded: “How many worship 41. Emploved e e L O e Euop. | et do the Chinese have foisay| | 1.Gress Lake | 4, Bestin o he:;m Fiia’ tuat el sty SHELaEe Been belleves (el ) bl i {ratiimas fERus gn. the idea L B The Red Chinese in Peiping h: £ ool el help them much unless they had s T 18 Tinglea 48. Evening Belp e font for their own sal. | uddenly started courting British| 1s. Obilterater E2. Otherwiss v & o and Swedish diplomats. The Chin-| 21. Axitate 63. Rage - g he first time in my life| ¢ invite them to dinners and re-| 23. Diner 54 Rmatl het “That’s the firs ¥ ceptions where the following line| o Larse rove Ko Bropbet that a Chief of Staff has ever em-}, dist s 21. Occidental 66. Fret is dished out: “There is no reason| g1 Entire | A barrassed me,” commented EISeN-| ) oping cant be friends with | hower. Britain and Sweden if only you | ST e # will stop being triends with those Capitol Lowdown—House d00r-| atrocious Americans.” keeper “fichbait” Miller, Who i8] . Tne Kremlin has refused to ac- | also in charge of the House “fold-| cent the appointment fng room,” has an interesting way | g Shazar S a of taking care of stepmother 1 Israel. The Soviet Fore in-law. He places her on the fold-| fise gave no reason but the Am-| ing-room payroll and lets UDCle|erican Embassy says Shazar is not| Sam foot the bill. If Fishbait does | wanted because he was once a Zion- this for his stepmother-in ist leader in Russia and is sus-| wonder what he does for his ¢ pected of wanting to return as a! relatives? (The “folding Roo " |spy. . .Acheson is telling friends sends out literature, Ix'unk«'d‘“?“'* that he will never resign undc etc., to Congressmen’s w“*“"{»"“ e—no matter how bitterly Senat.- | .. Though HS.T. has Bfim}{ ~]or McCarthy and other GOPste: uch on the Presidential black list.| a¢tack him Acheson is confident Baruch still bas plenty of power in Washington. Two of his closest friends, Gen. Lucius Clay and Mrs Anna Rosenberg, have key defense Jjobs, while Baruch also: cracks the whip occasionally over mobilizati the American people eventually will realize how unfair these attacks are and that his policies will finally | be vindicateq while men like Mec- Carthy will go down in history as 1mahuuu.~ crackpots. with it a sharp decline in the number of the jobless. | Jloyment shifts, it appears that a negligible number he returned he saw the car turn the | immediately reported it to the Po- | stic king-making. He has been con- | anof Hotel, Herb Rowland, Presi- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA — -_— = | ° L] ° February 7 ol L . > Ruth Dae Brooks ol |e Doris Ann Bartlett . ° R. L. Shultz . le Merle Bryce ° ‘e Mrs. Betty Fenton © e Ursula Green . le Mrs. Delia Knight ] . Louise Allen ° o o @ 0’ P elate PR {CHMUNITY EVENT ;a.e HIUN S ! | TODAY At 8 pm. — Elks lodge. | At 8 p.m. — Alaska Potters regular monthly business meeting in chib rooms in AB hall. All members | requested to attend. | At 8 pm Women of Moose pi- nochle party at Moose lodge. February 8 !At noon — Chamber of Commerce meets at Baranof. [At 11 am Martha Society food | sale in Sears Roebuck, Seward street. At 2 pm Study Club, League of Women Voters meet in apartment | of Mrs. Frank Metcalft. }.n 8 pm Garden Club film— | ‘How to Grow Beautiful Roses,” | Grade school auditorium. | At 8 pm. — Emblem Club meeting { s lodge rooms; refreshments. | At 7:15 p.m. — Mariner Scout troop, | First Aid course, at home of Molly I Joe MacSpadden. |at 8 pm Lutheran Ladies, Aid | meets in church social rooms. {At 8:45 pm. — Juneau Singers | meet for rehearsal in Methodist ¢ church. February 9 |At 8 pm Special meeting City Council in City Hall chambers. m 9 to midnight — Annual Tolo in high school gym. Day of Prayer — 12 moon, | ;; ‘ organ concert in Methodist | ch 45 p.m. — Presenta- ind worship at Luth- at 8 pm. — Wor- n church Ski Club meets in A.B. eran church; ship and service, Luth At 8 pm. — hall. cbruary 10 Annual Valentine Guild in Parish inity in hall At 10 pm. — Annual ball of Juneau Volunteer Fire Department in | Elks ballroom. | At 8:30 p.m. — Sourdocey Sgliare | Dancing club dance in Parish hall February 11 From 3 to 5 pm. — Square Dance Callers clinic in Parish hall. | February 12 At noon — Lions club, Baranof. 7 pm. — Annual Republican Lincoln Day dinner in Gold Room, Baranof. At 8 p.m. — American Legion Post meets in Dugout. February 13 |At noon — Rotary Club, Baranof. At 8:45 pm. — Community Center i night for adults in Teen-Age club i with square dancing. February 14 At noon — Kiwanis club, Baranof. At 1:30 p.m. — Juneau Garden Club meets at home of Mrs. George Sundborg. BOUGLAS MNEWS ALTAR SOCIETY MEETS The monthly meeting of the Altar Society of the Douglas Catho- lic Church will be held tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock at the home |of Mrs. X. F. Moesh. regular | | | | | [ | SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSE Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN . Before 1. Fold . Dreadful . Carriage . Proverb . Drunkard . Rained and snowed . Leav: . Azes . Cord . Allure . Fertjlizer . Replant . Blemish . Story . Cognizant . Compound ether . Rubbers . Interpret: arch. . Require 33 Pommels . Tidier 8. Corrode ew Tub Female deer Summe Fr 20 YEARS AGO &% pupine | ] ) FEBRUARY 7, 1931 i The office of the Signal Corps, United States Army, was moved at | the noon hour this day from Main and Front Street to the new Capitol | transfer of the many delicate instruments was mudei un with Sid Brannin, hunter, had removed all traps and sus- During the trapping period 23 wolves | prog pended operations for the present. were taken in the district. Prizes were won at the Douglas Island Women’s Club card party: at bridge by Mrs. Elsie Waldal and Guy L. Smith for high scores and | V. H. DeBolt and Miss Laino Aalto, consolation. Winners at whist were Mrs. Alex Gair and A. Rosnes first, and Mrs. Gust Nelson and J. R.| Guerin, consolation. Weather: High, 39; low, 36 cloudy. | e = u Daily Lessons in Enalish % 1. corbon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not write, “I have your letter of Feb- ruary 1, and contents noted.” Omit the last three words. The fact that you are answering is evidence that you have noted the contents of the e o i i { D: Precedent (adjective, meaning preced- as in ME with accent on second syllable). something said or done that may serve as n PRESS, ccent first syllable. observe the three vowe carnage, slaughter. (noun, me example) ; OFTE SYNONYMS WORD STUDY: increase our vocabulary by m DRASTIC; acting vig ) necessary to insure safety. pronou: yor; and it is your: ord each day. Tod in effect. “Drastic measures were ing one | MODERN ETIGUETTE %pera vom | Q. When a wife has received an invitation over the telephone, is it proper for her to say, “May I ask John if he has any other plans for | that evening. and then call you back”? A. Yes, this is perfectly all rig And it avoids much embarrass- ment should it develop that her husband does have other plans. Q. When a dinner guest is not asure which piece of silver to use, what should he do? Watch the hostess and observe which piece she uses — then fol- | | | | A. low suit. Q. When a girl wears a man’s fraternity pin, does it imply that she is engaged to him? A. Yes. While this is not always true, the implication is there. P i . | LOOK and LEARN ¥ ¢ corvow 1. What foods rank first and second as the principal foods of the world’s people? 2. Where are the world’s finest diamonds mined? 3. What great Biblical figure ws shipwrecked and became a captive in Malta? 4. What are the plural forms of the words “radius” and “apex”? 5. Who wrote “The Lady of the Lake"? ANSWERS: 1. Rice and fish. 2. South Africa. 3. Paul. 4. Radii and apices. 5. Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832). JOHN ROGERS as a paid-ap subscriber 10 THE UAILY 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: "JIGSAW" Federal Tax—1%c Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—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! —— Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Weather al Alaska Poinfs Weather conaiuons ana temper- Building. The safely and quick } atures at various Alaska point |also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 The Chamber of Commerce initiated a movement to bring local :::;se;m;hy fi;’lwe‘;mz:m;m:f labor supplies to the attention of Southeast Alaska canneries with are as follows: a view of undertaking to fill as much of the cannery labor requirements Anchorage 2—Clear the coming season 4s is possible Local labor available for cannery Annette Island 28—Snow work would be listed by the Chamber and with this information at hand | Barrow . -13—Partly Cloudy the canneries would be urged to hire at least a portion of their crews Bethel 4—Show from this source. Cordova -6—Clear 2 4 Dawson -49—Fog Edmonton -27—Clear The organization or a vuneau Chorai Society was to be planned | Fairbanks -31—Clear at a meeting of inlercsted persons in the studio of Miss Caroline Todd | Haines . 8—Clear on Main Street. —_— Havre -15—Partly Cloudy The Masquerade Valentine Dance given by the Women of the Moose | Juneau - 2—Clear was one of the largest affairs of the kind ever witnessed in Moose | Kodiak 26—Partly Cloudy Hall, attended by a large crowd, and more masked ancers than at any | Kotzebue -13—Clear similar event in Juneau in years. A special feature was a dance given McGrath HeEhey | by thre ear old Irene Begis. Costume prize winners were Mesdames :;:;::;;“d) o 5?0;1}' . 1 -53—Fog Meitanen, n, Dooran, Hagland and Webster and William Haynes. peiershurg 12—Cloudy p _ e Portland 40—Rain A survey of the Prince of Wales Island district indicated that the prince George e Show number of wolves remaining after a trapping program through the geattle 42—Rain past soring and summer, did not justify further work at this time and Sitka 25—Cloudy Harlan H. Gubser, head of the Territory’s predatory animal control Whitel -44—Fog Yakutat -5—Clear BIRTH CERTIFICATES PILING UP; PARENTS ASKED TO GET THEM Due to the addition of 21 more birth registration notices, the Ju- neau Health Center, 318 Main St {is again overloaded with these items. We now have close to 80 notices in the files. It is surprising that more parents do not seem to be interested in obtaining these notic as they are supplied free of charge by the Bureau of Vital Statistics, and while they do not take the place | of the Birth Certificate, they are a means of checking to make sure that your baby is properly register- ed. This m; not seem important while the baby is yet young, but to have the birth registration notice means prompt receival of the cer- tificate when it is needed as all the information needed by the Depart- ment of Vital Statistics is on the notice. g If the baby’s birth registration notice has not come through it would be well for parents to check to make sure their child is register- ed. The notices now on hand at the Health Center are for babies born through December 1950 and before. gway Mrs. George Villesvik of is registered at the Gastinea WALT HATLI ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Experienced House Wiring Electrical Marine Repair Phone Red 355 Juneau, Alaska O —— T A T V.F.W. Taku Post No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.LO. Hall at 8:00 p.m. The Erwin Feed Co. Oftice in Case Lot Grocery Phone 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Casler’s Men's Wear Sportswear BOTANY llsw" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men SHAFFER’ SANITARY MEAT FOB BETTER MEATS 13-—-PHONES—4% Pree Delivery ESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1951 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. Wm. A. Chipperfield, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. €) B.P.0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler, W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. e J—— o a2 Mcose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN i || Brownie's Liquor Sfore Phene 103 139 e. Frinkile P. O. Box 2508 —_— fl "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Phermnists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Masic Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies .Phone 206 .Second and Seward.. GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Phone 549 Fred W. Wendas Card Beverage C Wholesale 805 10th B8s. PHONE 216—DAY er NIGHT for MIXERS er SODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Eenovated Reoms st Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE © PHONE 556 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS —— OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters BOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Wern by Batisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM » daily habit—ask for it by mame Juneau Dalries, Inc. Chrysler Marine Enginer 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. S. GRAVES The Clothing Mas LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone T3 High Quality Cabinet Werk for Home, Office or Stere ————————— B e e e e T e

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