The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 8, 1951, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR = " Daily Alaska Empire Puhllshed every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Junesu, Alaska HELEN TROY MONSEN - - & DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - - ELMER A. FRIEND - - - - ‘What President Vice-President Mansging Editor gates plus six or believe it fitting ®atered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douzlas for §1 six months, $9.00; cne vear, § By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One year, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.60; ome month, in advance, $1.50. Bubscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any fallure or irregularisy in the delivery of their papers. Teluphones: News Office, 602; MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoctated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- m'l.muedlled in this paper and also the local news published per month; attitude, We a constitutional c are Business Office, $74. ond, eight from t one at large. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Pourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. by the 8-4-1 orial, H. R. 331 Now, Judge Anthony Representative A A careful hearing fails to Thursday, February 8, 1951 Senator Enge SECTIONALISM AND THE THIRD ' T %1% DIVISION Bl — Third Division, k committeee We wish to commend Rep. Doris M. Barnes of our | ©Ommitteee own First Division, who sparked the measure, anc the sixteen other Representatives from the First, Sec- ivisi i " Most the ond and Fourth Divisions for thejr stand in protesting Aosy OF Provisions of the statehood bills that might have re- | 118 directly exbre sulted in depriving these Divisions of their rightful| 3% and several representation in the proposed constitutional conven- | <P408¢: $ tion. In view of puzzling. Seven Third Division Representatives made a great cry of “sectionalism” during the debate on the memorial. If there is sectionalism in our Legislature, we be- vention, lieve the prime guilt lies in the Third Division. tation, it's scre Two years ago and four years ago we saw efforts e on the part of the Third Division to take unto itsell Many a per the capital that has for nearly 84 years rested in the | % closed. It has enter, but keer First Division. Already in this session the Third Division has attempted to wrest the headquarters of the Commis- sioner of Agriculture from the ¥ourth Division. The Third Divisioners cry that they were hurt by The mmmlsl Hessimist nd other friendship projects to The Washingfon i A ogre i & card Py Me"y-GO'Round | Communist seats have dropped from 56 to 27. In the Soviet zone of Aus- lrm, Communists (Continued from Page One) ‘ 11 parliamentary seats. In Belgium, | they lost five out UI 12 seats in the lower House and two out of five in the Senate. . .In Denmark the recent war and before he went | they dropped from 76 elective posts to Germany as ary governor, Yto only 24, . .The Dutch Commun. Clay demanded of FDR that there | St neWwspaper Is now down . be compulsory allocation of labor | 400000 circulation to around 100.- under a labor draft. | 000, while the Communist Press of That was one reason why the five | France has taken similar losses. leaders went to see mobilization | MOSt amazing development, how- czar Charlie Wilson last week to| c'er 18 vm Italy, where t\\nbwp try to keep civilian manpower under Communist Senators have resign- power commission which he o ganized. They recall that during the Labor Department. They got ed from the Party and are s‘mrL;nv‘ SEATTLE, Feb. 8 P —Prote nowhere. Wilson's attitude during an independent party similar m‘ over the Alaska salmon canrer; the bitter meeting was “I'm running | T1t0's. union election will delay certifica- things—we’ll do it my way,” though he didn't put it quite so bluntly He didn't have to. On the way to the meeting the labor group had read a news story telling of Wil- son's and General Clay's plan to set up their own manpower com- mission under Civil Service Com- missioner Arthur Flemming—with Clay, however, as the real boss. ‘Wilson did not deny the story. Nor did he seem concerned when the labor leaders reminded him that he was setting up a board to contro! labor without consulting labor. Military Scuttlebutt — The Air Force is probing complaints of kickbacks and shortages at the Bolling Field Officers Club out- side Washington. Maj. Dan H. Rog- ers, Officer-in-Charge, has resign- ed. . .Anny Chief of Staff General Collins told the Senate Armed Services Committee behind closed doors that there are now 950,000 Communist troops in Korea. Mac- Arthur’s intelligence at the same time reported only 276,000. . .Here are the results of a check on re- ports that Col. James Demarest has been made special consultant to the Quartermaster General at the behest of ex-Assistant Secretary of Defense Paul Griffith, ermaster ,of course, hands out some of the juciest contracts in govern- Ample Authority When reminded that labor was consulted equally with management during World War II, and that labor had a co-chairman on the Office of Production Management ‘Wilson made it plain that he did not plan to follow this precedent “I have authority from the Pre- sident,” he said, “and I am going to use that authority. I haven't as yet asked Arthur Flemming to head up this manpower commis- sion, but I intend te do so. And if he doesn't accept, 1 may head it up myself.” we don't like a proposi- tion like that,” spoke up CIO Pre- 4 a day whenever consulted, was pointed Jan. 22, and is as: in public relations with Paul Gr fith, according to the Quartermaster Corps. It was denied, however, that Griffith recomngended Demarest for the job. . .Griffith, when queried denied everything—even that he wos associated with Demarest in public relations work. But when told that the Quartermaster stated just op- posite, Griffith admitted he had discussed a public relations setup with Demarest. Wonder how a pub- lic relations man could be worth $40 a day for advising the Army on “Well, sident Phil Murray. “We represent the men and women who are en- gaged in war production work and we think we should at least have an the government's equal voice in manpower policies.” war contract: .The Munitions Murray added that if Wilson be- | Board’s failure to stockpile wool came manpoyer chief in addition | has forced the Army to bid against to his top job as Mobilization | the Russians on the Australian wool boss, it would be the same as a|market—with the price going up man “taking advice from himself.” | every day. Note—Other labor leaders a!lend« —— ing the meeting were: Dan Tracy.} Unhappy Good Neighbors—TLatin President of the AFL El*“"““ Americans have a bone to pick with Workers; Al Hayes, President debonair Eric Johnston, the new the Mac onomic Stabilizer. Johnston’s na International Association ox — is signed to the Chapultepec Tr George Leighty inlists; max of the Railroad Labor i- | by which the USA. agrees to con- tives Association; and James Carey.! ¢t with its good neighors before CIO Secretary-Treasurer. freczing prices, However, Johnscn Latin-American Am merely called in didn't consult Inside the Communists — There | bassadors were was something funny about the way j the last minute and told. The FParrar, Straus and Co., sunddenly | was no consultation. . .The Ameri- Jjunked Hede Massing’s new book on | can, public doesn't realize it, bu life inside the Communist Party.| Latir get hi der than She’s the ex-wife of Gerhart Eisler,| one else by price freezes. The and the book won't do Stalin any|us coffee, for instance, at good. . . The manuscript was im-! prices, but can't buy back mediately snapped up by Duell,| scarce machinery, mine etc Bloan and Pearce. .Communist | because we don’t have them to Party membership has taken a|spare. Then, after war, the prices terrific beating in Europe in the|of these scarce articles 2o up Look out for trouble in Venezuela When college students and faculty wake of the Marshall Plan, the| Tide of Toys, the friendship train they ha real reason for their control the convel that this It is exceedingly strange, in view of th that TI againsh the provisions speaking now ing eight from the It would seem that if the Third Division is representation reques it was severely testified before the Senate Committee on Insular Affairs last Avoril concerning They included Robert B. Atv breth, John Hellenthal, M: the apportionment proposed under the bill then under consideration. “Most Anchorage and our division represents ty of the total population of Alaska.” Third Division witnegses at the hear: this, ‘When the Third Divisio! 31 per cent of the total repr it was satisfied. But now, with some 39 per cent of the represen- it's I iffects the \«olmm lost 10 of their | (The Quart-| ment.) Colonel Demarest draws $40 | ciate i1 ™ the fal. We fail to see thi The statehood bill no res them 10 delegates to the con J The memorial asks that they be given 12 delegates. ave lost — and perhaps this is the anguish — is the opportunity to ntion by electing their own 10 dele- at large. We denied them. more of the delegates opportunity be r present hird Divisioners made no protest of last year's statehood bill. of H. R. 331. It provided onvention with 26 delegates, First Division, four from the he Third, five from the Fourth a ed in the mem- | damaged by th a number of people from the Third Division iterio H.R. 33 sod, Edw Ryan and Nick Sablick J. Dimond, Se jor Z: A. Owen, Jr,, examination of the record of that disclose a single protest concerning of delegates to the convention as' breth told the commitee: “I believe actory to the great majority s here clearly aking for the| pecause he had previously told the of you know that r city of a great r atisfied with H. R passed without ssed themselves urged that it be the present situation is very| had approximatel ntation in the con- s of anguish are terrible to hear a mind that is neither open a check valve that allows prejudice from escaping. n has the ¢ is half full; th If empty. Neither attitude of the contents | says 1SS | in Caracas petitior rez Flameric prisoners, throw student too. President sympathy with the Army, prese his resignation, but the / fused to accept it. He office with a pl-'()l at CERTIFYING VOTES | | SALMON CANNERY ' ELECTION DELAYED tion of the vote, Thomas P. Graham, ‘ Jr., announced, yesterday. Graham, Regional Director of the National Labor Relations Board, | said the American Federation of, Labor Alaska fish cannery workers had protested the election bec ged employer favoritism to. Longshoremen’s Local 7, Mmh won. The NLRB in Washington, must rule on the protest, Gr said, before he can certify towa Longshoremen’s Local 7-C, which won. e D.C MANLEYS HERE Mr. and Mrs. Fred Manley of| Baranof are stopping at the Hotel Juneau. Nebraska Visitor | E. Carl Huish of Grand Island, | Neb., is a guest at the Hotel Juneau. | ACROSS L Head covering Siscuit . Breach Guided ump of earth naulitity rench coin fabrie Seer . Operatic solo Rodent Most filthy -mouthed pot . Alloy of sllver and zold Number . At the present time . Feelers . Spreads to dry {At 8:45 pm DAILY ALASKA EM SKA I’IR E—JUNEAU, AL/ THUR Harry Wor John E. Turner ®eecccccccoe | | { COMMURNITY EVENTS - TODAY Club film Roses, Public b meetin hments. ; hadden At 8 D Lutheran Ladies Aid cial meeting City Hall chambers, ht — Annual Tolo | y 12 noon neert in Methodist 2:45 pm { t nd we T crvice, Lutheran church. [ hip ¢ At 8 p.m. —- Ski Club mests in AB hall Fo At 1 2 Young Hardware, paredness skills.” 1 slunt rtment Elks ball Sourdocey Square e in ilar d: February 11 From 3 to 5 p.m. — Square Dance | Callers clinic in Parish hall. February 12 At noon — Lions club, Baranof. At 7 pm Annual Republican i Day dinner in Gi 3 Baranof At 8 pm. — American Legion Post meets in Dugout February 13 At noon — Rot nigh t noon At 1:30 pm C meets at home of Mr Sundborg. At 8 pm. — Elks'Lo February 15 — Chamber of Commerce eets at Baranof. Former Residen! 0f Cordova Dies| gl resident SEATTLE, M — Carl h, Feb. former Cordova, Alaska, died yesterday a his hom n in Norway, he came to the ed States in 1908, and to Seat- tle in 1912, four years later he moved to Cordova, where he lived 20 years. He was a retired carpenter. His widow and a daughter vive. . Dried grape . Crude meta) teral with opposite lwiw ition le cat . 1m Kin Luzon native Light slap Vended s ot Old i trees iun biré b in sur- | | 2 vessel s i et § 20 YEARS AGQ | & o itnimsioattn it sttt s FEBRUARY 8, nfer from THE EMPIRE } ) R ity | 1931 of the Alaska Ros 1al program co ad Commis 1 to open March 3, it was announced by Maj. L. E Ofi Field operatives from four of the dist attend to stu planned for the coming season. The district super Hu‘enm ticip: in the conference. we |7 C. Edmunds, Anchorage; T. H. Huddle ard, Chitina A ¢ 1 distilling plant, moonshine whiskey mash were CC r 1 carly morning raid on a house on W Avenue k Agents T. L. Chidester ad B, H. The still, to be in active op! on at the time of the en 60 t run st nd 70 gallons of moonshine, ome glycerine and a lax let was a patient at St. Ann’s Hospital for Atk C. Dunlap, I hom were here from their Alfred L iren and Mrs. 1Y two ch Y M M. |in |¢ ttle said they and sa hin th the fishermen o the week rmen had been of 1915 but objectgd to ¢ Halibut fishermen h: ¢ seine boats by individual o e Deep Sea Fis! , it w en’s Union. day JONI (Pronou His speech we M DERH dance t one call, ? A. The gu hould 1 he operator upon complet of fhe conversation and amount should ther be given to the hos Q. When giving a bridge party, and you have several prizes to offer, should these prizes be wrapped or left n? | A. It is much better to wrap them attractively 3 Q. How should a wedding invitation be addressed to a man and | his ‘.V‘iu beth of whom doctors? ply as, “The Doctors Robert and Ruth Johnson.” fl#\ and LE'\QN A C GGRDONz. e R VA - 1. What is the size of the ring used for championship boxing matches? 2. What was the name of the vessel that brought the Pilgrim Fathers to Plymouth Rock? 3. What voice part is usually written between Middle C and the |G a twelfth above? 4, What is the color-carrying portion of the eye called? | 5. What character in drama has been called the prototye, or “the father of all stage villains”? ANSWERS: = It is a 24-foot square 2. “The Mayflower.” 3. Tenor. 4 5 The ir Shakespeart s Macbeth. ALBERT WHITE ' DALY ALASKA THIS EVENING ice of the | CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: i “JIGSAW” as a paid-ap sabscriber 1o THE EMPIRE is invited to be our gues Pregent this coupon to the box off Federal Tax—1%c Pald 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 Appear | | | | | | | f Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 { The B, M. Behrends | | Bank | | Safety Deposit : | Boxes for Rent ‘ COMMERCIAL SAVINGS | | | | offered the same L Weather at &'as-.%za Point Weather conaitions ana temper- atures at various Al i} also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:3C . am., 120th dialy Time, ancd released oy (he Weather Bureau we as foliows horage 12—Cloud Rair b5—Ice -36—Cle ATTLE, Feb. 8 A— A tored Air Forc , then gained ergency | with ere week’s euvers North ervice ship e WALT HATLIN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Experienced House Wiring Electrical Marine Repair Phone Red 355 V F.W Takn Post He. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. I3 RS S N SRR l The Erwin Feed Co. i Office in Case Lot Grocery Thone 764 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Btreet Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sta. PHONE 138 Casler's Men's Wear i MeGregor Sportswear Btetson and Mallory Hats Arrew Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Bhoes Biyway Luggage BOTANY "500" CLOTHES || NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Cemplete Outfiiter for Mes BHAFFER'S 17—Snow | Cloudy e 3 Junean, Alaska SDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1951 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple ,\[ beginning at 7:30 p. m. G Wm. A. Chipperfield, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. ©) B.P.0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 PM. Visiting brothers weicome WALLIS S, GEORGE, Exalted Ruler, W. H. BIGGS, Secretary, 9—Cloudy 30-—Cle: -17—Cle -37—Clear -12—Clear ( HMcose Lodgefi?fli Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN Erownie’s Liguor Store FPhoos 168 139 Be. Frionklie P, 0. Box 2588 | "The I exall Store” Your Rellable Pharm.cista BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alasxa Husic Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Plavos—Musical Yostraments and Supplies Phone 266 _Becond and Seward. GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Card Beverage Ca. Wholesale 805 10th ¢, PHONE 218—DAY er NIGHY for MIXERS or EODA POP The Alaskan Hotel HNewly Renovited Rsonwm #t Ressonable Bstee PEONE BINGLE G PHONE 558 !’horx‘as Hardware (o, PAINTS —— OILS Builders’ and Shel BARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD zad BERVICED »y J. B. Bu “Our Doorst Satisfled © FORD AGENCY (Authcrized Dealers) GREABES — GAS — OIL Jonean Metor Ca. Poot of Main Bireet MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM » dally habli—ask for it by mame Juneau Datries, Inc. Chrysler Marine Enginer MACHINE SHOP Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liguor Store—Tel. 889 American Meat — Phone 38 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 BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 17 Main 8t. Phone T3 High Quality Cabinet Werk for Home, Office or Stere e e

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