The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 20, 1951, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE YR G COMPANY and Main Juneau, Alasks fish could look for and the new legal opportur Only thin, first, and we wonc map: Publ and cels, President Vice-Prestdent Managing Editor EN one TROY - Y - A. FRIEND earching Srcnnd Class Matter. he in the Post Office In SURSC mmuv N RATE! elivered by earrier in Jun, nd Douglas for S1.75 per month; six months, cme year, $17.50. By mall, postage paid, at the following rates: Oue year, in ad £15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; an where the dividir Bay, distance, or have the; from whi: favor if they will promptly notify re or irregularity in the delivery Business Office, 374. \n\n‘n OF ASS s is exclusively entitled to the use for tches credited to it or not other- also the local news published To a lot of peo the halibut * yund rather compli ing abc wheref o Newspapers, 1411 Wash, s may s mple €no Seattle is atisfactory desired end The principal that certain halib 1ot being touched rangement there is the opening of the and the fishing c 1s a separate run Now a confere with the the season reverting to would be advantage of eason would of fish ween two period It would appe been arrived at w able to give the Inte might the Febr 20, 1951 o trips One Tuesday, ry CAN THEY BEAR IT? , during the ¢ ussion of the Kodiak orial Legislature, the following view ITOor are not amiss: of Commerce this week ason on Kodiak bear second voted in to @t on thi p on| al standpol the nni thereby being the favor end of > island, in recent weeks to do so. in favor of such a ould have more protection against ir cattle., the salmon fisheries and who insist bhear eat too many an open season: our suggestion if ¢ that he be alarm-c the and a half before s replie arge of Press Relat hd( he could make " ions, The Washinglon Verry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) | Admi rawford was We are just not nfun!nu on,” the giving out Commander with atomic en- he had known en plant the of- emphat- tipy “How about the numker of bath- rooms? Is that confidential, tcc? 5 comment.” house e of , but paid for had R The Commander adm it was. “Then isn't the to know how many the hoyse which built?"” “You may write a let requesting this the number of rcoms, the Commander, “And ouzh channels.” ¢ th entitled in public rooms their are money Au- 5 ted in the , shortly after thes hydrogen > had known in to be lo- olumnist, Brown that he had wn thing in "1\‘\1)(!' lu l\c Augusta Heraid, I nitted knowing ~u,u l. vance and further sta- had called a group of on Nov. 27—one betore the official announce- “explained thai an an- cement of a tremendous gov- nt defense plant likely would that this as 2,500 offici- ation o ally about plied will answer you thr Note— Navy Matthew the lush living g will remain with Adm son, since he is to command hospital and since Matt Admiral Pugh, as new General, to give his time to other matters. was Swan- th i together that Labor Complains National CI nan the few people ny punches with it advised M hat his relations with or ganized labor are at a new low. “The labor pecple are as a koil and threatening to walk away frem the Democratic party,” Boyle! warned, a list of griev- ances a mile long.” When Mr. Truman asked partict the Dem replied: “They claim call . on them for advice o and have surrounded yourse vith big business advisers. When | they start talking about the new) mokilization setup, they simply ex- plode.” Mr. Truman has received similar | warnings {rom Secretary of thei Ir John Snyder, Secretary of | Lakor Maurice Tokin and Atior- General Howard MoGrath. within hou many made ld require tional hom oposed Democr i Bill Boyle, who never pu . the President, ator Brown explained Truman that ¥ of his friends by mm;,l need for helping He did not explain, how- these friends proceeded up options on farm prop- low $80 an J me else in on the bi the high for as as for a| ot t e don’t help inclu- power in legislature, t instead development explain Wk se frien nother Carolir in on the: the housing project. i ting is the fact that; which the ndicate s located on a choice 61 leading to hydrozen pxm. overnight valuable. Atomic F.ne:'gyl to the fact that! s important information was to leak out in advance, vital fic secrets might leak also, mi aff has now L‘.lle\’i‘ 1 v teres! on 2 Propo new location which e immen: Washington Pipeline £enator Hill Langer of Dakota tried to delay the the old German embassy, claiming | e should wait for the ap- intment of a new German Am- bassador. The emba: seized by the U. S. Government during the war, is a decrepit building in down. town Washington, long by- pws«ej shifting of embassies tc w northwest Washington. L: er's delaying tactics failed and in the end the emba: S nased Ly Morris * Cafritz, Washington most enterprising realtor . . . the French Chancery is having a Mo- hammedan Mosque built almost in | its front yard. The Arab League, having raised a small fortune to; ! finance an ornate Mosque with miniaret, chose as its site a loca- ticn immediately in front of the Franch Chancery and not far from the Brazilian, British and Ven- ezuclan embas AT THE BARANOF £vesgie of Erie, Pa., the Baranof Hotel. g | | North | the sale of | [ e Clifford eon Ge: I¥ i Herbert Pugh, eon General. each other’s both wi to oc- 1k house on the of the Naval Hospital which Admiral Swanson’s home h was £us Although h jok, Swanson Commander in Rober is a ‘ iving quarters. However, Admlral Pugh, the top medic %n the navy, wanted these lush quarters for himecelf, When this column telephoned ! the hospital to ask how many)| rooms there were in the Admiral's TS R se and why it was considered KETCHIKAN VISITOR h a wonderful place to live in,| Larry Erickson of Ketchikan mmander C. V. Crawford, in|at the Baranof Hotel. FROM.LADD FIELD Cpl. Clyde Zarkas, of Ladd Air-|{ base at Fairbanks, stopping at the Hotel Juneau. is local hun g or bearskin coat y line will be, from Viekoda to Ugak paw in our direction? The Halibut Problem (Prince agreement suggestic during last settle this lor If the Western nations arm the G AT | reference to iinanci we 1 i aska; | vigor |est Gruening, Governor of Alaska, {Cross fund which will be almon with less bear around, with »ne r would have uniimitea more te who aren't isfied a ye: rities. The bear were here about it. Are they showing each other ies us they feel ;WO er b s of the island, already retired behind it, to a safe ch they are thumbing a well-placed Rupert Daily News) le whys and But really | certainly some sort of reached to meet th talk we have and the ated all this plit” season d should be At aim is to time the fishing ! ut grounds may b now because under one grand rush immediately after| season and the quota is exhausted, losed before these fish—established have reached the banks concerned. ence board at Seattle has come up n that the object of lvv\uthw:hn:l be more effaciously effected hy | former curtailment plan. Thereby, ,ggerd to lengthen out the seas n" a curtailment plan over th be that there would be an orderly the summer without a gapj is when there would be no fish. ar th ensible basis has ereby the governments should rnational Commission the autho tanding problem from g The matter is now up to the it is staled. such nt. ent, it v German is caught goose-ste locked out of bed and & unrise. PROCLAMATION | procl The following assist during the in; has been the Red Cr [40 month of March, Gruening: in thi time of na upon defense of e American Red Cro: whose rec unexcelled, to the ung defe prograr JHEREAS, the Resources Board the Red Cross the ta of our ng @ mi and ter miliion First Am in Home r I~ ; and WHEREAS, the armed for asked the Red Cross to us resources to collect blood to the lives of battle-wounded service- men in addition to its normal pro- gram of providing the life-giving fluid to hospitals and clinics; WHEREAS, to this is added problem of planning for reserve of blood plasm for Civil Defense jor underiaking on th> home have A the WHEREAS, these emergency task: - in addition to the nor time functions of giving tance to needv disaster victims as the Red Cross done at va ious times to & oW, great THEREFORE, ix bs [ forwa sevevoecvcoceoen ed to carry Civil Def as well as thrc and to lend ever I, Ern- n Alaska he »ation, ace to the Red Cross, = | upon every Alaskan to cc gemerously to the 1951 noJ‘ ed | during the month of March 1951.|C French department . Top card . Expre contempt Note of the scale 88, Afresh 89, Spiderlike ‘marine ACROSS Mulberry bark Assemblage of tents Female saintt abbr. . Patron salnt of Norway . State positively . Be profitable 5. Profane Suffix denot!i ank state or r: . Knock Fruits of the oak Made a mistake in orthog- animals 42. Happened 45. Masculine name 46. 100 square meters 47. Reparation 52, Bind . Back of the necl 54. Notion 5. Held a session 66, First name of the principal in a famous slavery case ew 1. 2. 8. Symbol for tellurium 57. Ho At 8 pam. hot an hour | At At At At 8 pm. gistered at the Baranof Hotel. 4. Unwilling THE DAILY ALASKA EMPK Marian Jackson Martha Newbould Edith M. Moore John Ha ¥ S. MacKinnon, Jr. Don Parson Elizabeth Worden e o o o o EVENIS DAY — Couple Club meet h parlors. M three dJ. e00cecesec t 6:30 p.m. Ketball high | ¢, yurnament, games, school gym. Folkateers meet school gym. 7:30 pm. — Delta Chapter, Beta | sigma Phi meets in Gold Room, | anof. i 8 p.m. — Juneau-Douglas Civil Council meets in City il chambers in ade y Center | in Teen-Age lancing, Night for Adul Club with squ t 8 pm o rall. Juneau Woman's lative luncheon, Gold Room aranof. 6:30 p.m. — Pioncers nd Izloo banquet B: of Alask in IO at 7:45 in 7 p.m. — Cocktails; Toastmasters banquet Baranof. Alaska Potters mee in A. B. hall. s Lodge. B, Annual Wash- hday ball in Scott Rite Temple. | 8 p.m. — Public pinochle I at Moose club February Grand Igloo, Pioneers | in IOOF hall. Il\'l of Commere g pm. uze headqu 8 p. 10 p.m ingt iarte on hy 1 BU It |y 1 | 29 | who usus | | cow | t noon Licn noon — Business and Profe al Women'’s Club meets in Terrac Room, Baranof. t 8 pm. — Rebekah practice in IOOF hall. Drill_ Team Dugout. February 27 Ro y Club, February 28 — Rebekah lodge meets in ICOF hall. noon — Baranof. TIDE TABLE lab] February 21 High tide 1:59 am. Low tide High tide 15.8 ft. 29 ft - RE |in 1930 19 ¢ el P e = e e o e hould she address her ould include girl when lea —JUNEAU, ALASEKA YEARS A 0 TIIl"l EMPIRE? FEBRUARY 20, 1931 i 1 ty had been' received by the United States Bureau of Bublic preceed with construction of 11 projects on the Forest Highway Alaska projeets.- It* was announced by Bistrict The estimated total cost of the projects available for immediate expenditure out of Service’s highway allotments. The first advertised and on which work would start first in the were the reconstruction of Mendenhall River bridge and bridge and Rocky Point reconstruction on Glacier Highway. approved W. Williams. | all of which we funds of the U. S. For M. I be confirmed by the Marshal White was Territory as well from other West- 1 Albert White was this ds v term for this Di on. leaders in the Mar: fous States sther nneries would be operated by the Pacific American Fish- the coming summer, E. B. Deming, president, first vessel of the company fleet to sail north The company had operated 13 canneries Eleven ca Alaska unced. during The tle March 25. ) leave were a box of apples, $1.89; egsgs, milk, 16-ounce cans, Saturday’s specials in a local store butter, two pounds for 67 cents; nts per can or $3.83 nts per dozen; mpion basketball quintet this day series with Ketchikan’s cagers to title holders of Southeast Alaska. beginning as High School’s district ci nal preparations the e High School Conference would be played on the Douglas Natatorium floor, Weather: High, 38; low, rain. aity Lessons in English % L corboN PR USNSSUSSDSO S SO U FOLK is a collective noun and means | » humble folk of the country.” FOLKS is ‘My fa at home.” Remediable. Pronounce re-me-di-a- 18 ed, accent second tyllable. Vain (useless). Vein (channel). | a word th times and it yours.” Let us ring one word each day. Today's word: ludicrous antics. ‘The clown was ple or d for “people; kinsmen, OFTEN MISPRONOUNC E's as in ME, T MISSF STUDY ocabulary by FFOONERY; clowning; master at buffoone: MODERH £ peoples,” ¢ both OFTEN WORD rease ¢ e maste musing or Vi * ir by }F E ROBERTA LEE et e | Q. When a girl has spent a weekend in another girl’s home, to whom “bread and butter” letter? A. This letter may be add d to her friend, a message acere appreciation to the gril's mother, |y 1ly deserves much of the credit for a pleasant visit. Is it proper for a salesman to say “good-bye” to the reception | an exezutive? courteous, Q. e office of but also tactful. A small next time the salesman | A not this is oftel remembered the / c With whom should the bride drive to the church for the wedding ‘ h her father. et ¢ What is a diphthong? What river is second only to the Volga River in size in Europe? Who was the father of the Biblical character, David? What is the abbreviation of the degree, Bachelor of Laws? What word is opposite in meaning to “oriental”? ANSWERS: 1. The sound produced by combining two vowels into a. single syl- le, or running together their soun: as “ou” in “doubt.” 2. The Danube. 3. Jesse. 4. LL.B. 5. Occidental. 8:09 pm ° o Low tide LES WINGARD HERE Les Wingard of Petersburg is re- From CORDOVA Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Logan of ordova are at the Baranof Hotel. LT ) ] R A N A £ L A s] P E E R E [*] Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle DOWN ol welghl for wool Malt liquor Dance step 8. Floor coverings 6. Topaz hum- ming -bird 7. Fusible opaque substance 8. Go before 9. Incite Small mountafn lake or pool Organs of sight . Headpieco . Poem . Botch . Press Lateral Looks askance Walking stick Genus of the maple tree Evergreen trees The Emerald Isle . Complained Inhabitant of: suffix Pertaining to the first man Place of worship . Anger . Flying mammals . Silkworm Measures of length Unclose: poetie . Anglo-Saxon consonant . New: comb, form Faucet '—————- —— i XAMINED ENSES PRESCRIBED L DR. D. B. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and Frar.klin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS Juneau TR WILMA CARTEETON as u paid-ap sabscriber w THE DALY ALASKA EMPILE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Preseut this coupon to the box office of the CAPITCL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “FATHER OF THE BRIDE" ’41¢ by the Theatre Federal Tax—1%Zc Phone 14—YELLOW CAR 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 Appelrl QOldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The BB, M. Behrends Bank Safety Pepeosit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS . | |and proposed that the present five- |1ion 1 | would continue but she certainly | e TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1951 | Weather af Alaska Pomls We-iher conditions ard atures at various Al also on'the Pacific Coass am, 120th Meridian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follows: Anchorage .. Annefte Island .. Barrow Bethel Cordova Dawson 3—Ice Crystals 37—Partly Cloudy -46- —Fu g Juneau .. Kodiak Kotzeb McGrath . Nome Northway Petersburg Portland Prince Geors | Eeattle Sitka ... Whnehorse Yakutat TRUMAN BOWS 0 31 Partly Cloudy 17—Partly Cloudy 39—Rain Showers | 31—Clea a _Partly Cloudy | —Partly Cloudy CONGRESS KEW RFC REORGAHIZAHON 20- howed of the corpor. WASHINGTON, Feb. Fre: Truman ssional iticism tion finance has T n man board of directors be by a single top hoss. Mr. Truman submitted ganiza to cor ahead of a projécted public h ing to charges that a W House and others have ex- erted placed | | [ e air aide dollar lending Under the reo itted to the government agency. anization two hous lending a separate | e branch of the plan the| agency “As tity in the e rovernment.” The President’s plan provides for | abolition of the ‘present five- board of directors e names he resubmitted to congress only a few days ago. In his message, the President said the plan gives the single ad- ministrator the functions of the present b pt for some du- 5 c assigned to a new board and to a board 1€l who: loan 1 of review. The President’s pro; fect is a capitulation to cional critics who have been oppos- ing confirmation of the pres board members. bsal in ef- by VISITOR P. G. Greer of Anchore the Baranof Hotel. — V.F. W, influense on the multi-bil- congres- | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14T SECOND and FOURTH Monday of, each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. Wm. A. Chipperfield, ‘Worshipful Mast JAMES W (. 2IVERST, . Secratary. @ 5.1, 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers weicome WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ru'er. W, H. BIGGS, Secretary. | Mcose Lodge No. 702 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN P e Brownie's Liquor Store Phene 163 139 Beo. Frinkilm ®. 0. Baox 28% "The Rexall Store” Your Rellable Pharmacisia SUTLER-MAURO JRUG CO, " Aleska Masic Sopply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical (nstrumenta and Suapplies .Fhone 206 .Second and Seward. GENERAL PAINTS . and WALLPAPER Ideal Baint Siore Phone 549 Preq W. Wenat ard Beverage Ca. 805 10th Ss. N6—DAY er NIGHT Whoiesale PHONE MWiXERS sr SODA POP T‘x'x Mlaskan Hotel Newly Renovaied Reoms ®i RBeasonsdle Rates PHO:ME BINGLE O PEONE 568 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS -— OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by Taku Post No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.1O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. The Erwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grocery FPhone 704 J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers™ FORD AGENCY (Authcrized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — oL HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Strect Near Third ! The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Frankliin Sts. PHONE 136 Casler's Men's Wfir BOTANY "500" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Cemplete Ouifitter for Mem e SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOL BETTEE MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Pres Delivery Junean ¥Molor Co. Foot of Main Street MAEER JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM » daily habit-—ask for it by nars Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Engines MACHINE SRO¥®P Marine Hardware Chas. G. Warner Co. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Btore—Tel 689 American Meat — Phone 38 To Banish “Blue Monday’ To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry ° H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Mam LEVPS OVERALLS for Boys BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. High Quality m 'fl‘ Home. Office or Stere e ———————a i

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