The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 6, 1951, Page 4

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YAGE FOUR ™ Daily Alaska Empire Publistied every evening except Sunday by the E MPIRE PRINTING COMP. Second and Main Streets, June HELEN TROY MONSEN DOROTHY TROY LINGO ZLMER A. FRIEND au, Alasks democracy. | J ANY i - President Vice-President | Managing Editor Sotered tn the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. | sU JBSCRIPTION RAT) Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Doucla; six months, §9.00; cne year, By mail, postage paid, at the foll One year, in advance, $15.00; six months, in ad ope month, in advance, $1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Teluphones. News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. r $1.75 per month: | With thc 50. ng rate 08! vance, $7.50; West but behind MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED ®RESS The Assoctated Press fs exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to 1t or not other- wise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. of “Titoism™ North Atlantic ambitions. Pa NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Wourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Tuesday, March 6, 1951 In terms of i even more impor Western !latter is purely the power of tho: selzure. That is why a to the resignations and Aldo Cucchi, ment and until r | Ttalian Commun: THE RIGHT TO VOTE As if to honor the birthday of Abraham Lin~oln, two States took action last month the poll tax as a“requiremnt for voting in general elections. When South Carolina’s General Assembly | ratified a constitutional amendment abolishing poll tax and the Tennessee House unanimously p: a bill which effectively kills its election levy the broad- ening of the franchise in those States was assured. It is historically appropriate that these actions were taken on the day after Lincoln's birthday, at a time when we study and re-examine the that great architect of government by all of the people. | I The poll tax practice has been used throughout our | history as a barrier between the ballot box and certain socail, racial or economic groups. The removal of this on the issue ! communist idea t Soviet Army will not be resisted. to do away with own minds. They sed by contributions of |the Soviet bloc n Italy follows that swath in almost a party. a | Communist The Washinglo;l Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) lence and bloodshed of Commu- nism, however, Turkey, led by its modern here, Kemal Ataturl Americans call him attabpy Tur escaped with a moderate state so- cialism. 1 REMEMBER TURKEY it has been, just 30, years since I was in Turkey. At that time I was a young relief worker in the Balkans and Turkey was occupied by French and British troops. Turkish women then wore veils and it was worth your life to see a woman face to face. Today Turkish women not only have discarded the veils but have become judges and have the same wage rate as men—something they don't have in the U.S. A.. . . Furthermore, it's no longer a sin for a Turkish woman to have gold fillings in her teeth, as was pre- viously banned by the Mohamme- dan religion, or to call in a doctor when she’s sick. . .. These are some of the things that President Ata- turk abolisheq when he broke the stranglehold o f Mohammedan priests on Turkey. GEORGE MARSHALL PRESI- DENT OF U. S. A.—Some Ameri- cans have worried over whether Europe really gave us credit for the Marshall plan. Turkey is one country where we don't need to worry. Up in northern Turkey coal miner was asked whether he knew President Truman. He re- plied he did not and added that he thought Marshall was president of the U. S. A, . The Marshall plan has been given the widest publicity and has done a good job. The ways of buying tractors and organizing farn: cooperatives under the Marshall plan have been plained on the, rado until mez; every village understand : can aid to Turkey. TURKISH CONG key has g in the vigorous American bra in the balcony listening to the de- bate and, with few exceptions, sounded like our senate debate. One was that almost every member parliament was in his seat, li ing. There was no rattling of ne papers or rude conversations, a: our House and Senate. A ference was that the pre: ficer wore white tie Furthermore, T really parliamentary ent ning their debates at 10 ¢ continuing until 2 ur congress which adjourns at 4 pn D. C. OF smartest a ex- b WOl am, —One of the things President Ataturk did ws remove the Turkish capital from the fleshpots and palaces of Ista bul, just as our founding fat} placed our capital not in New York or Philadelphia but in Wa: Just as the Australia placed their new capital in Canberra new Turkish republic put ital in the brand new city kara. . . . Here in Istanbul, civilization of a thousand rs | has built a city of contrasts—cob- blestone streets and modern movie ! theatres, bazaars where sunlight seldom penetrates and aircooled de- partment stores—all alongside the bosporus, so peaceful, so placid and so0 beautiful, yet for which so many 1ington so the R A t y | tioned at Istanbul as Nazi Ambas- | th thousands of people have given | their lives in contrast. . . . Ankara is slightly dull and slightly stuffy but the Turkish parliament has no diversions other than its work making democracy live. AMERICANS IN TURKEY— There now are about 3,000 Ame; cans in Ankara, most of them do- | ing unique joks. One is that of Col Francois D'Eiescue of the U. S. Army, who is teaching the Turks guerrilla-warfare tactics. The fight- ing Turks are supposed to be pretty good guerrillas themselves, but| D'Elescue is giving them new train- | ing as a result of Korea. . .. Onog American who causes the Turks o raise their eyebrows is U. S. Am- bassador George Wadsworth, who plays bridge most of the night and sleeps much of the day. Wadsworth [ startled Turkish society last month by appearing at a fancy dress bail wearing a fez. This caused many Turks almost to fall over in faint, for the fez has been banned as a symbol of the past and for a long time it was against the law for any Turk to wear a fez....In contrast, the British Ambassador, Sir Noel Charles, had the sense of humor to attend the fancy dress ball dressed as a valet—the famous valet who sold all the secrets of the British Embassy during the war to German Ambassador Franz von Papen. .. von Papen was the German who tried to blow up the international bridge between Can- ada and the U. S. and the Well- and Canal during the World War I. In World War II he was sta- sador and his wife approached by a valet to the British Amba: dor offering to sell highly import- ant secrets, As a result the valet was paid $1,000,000 by the Germans and he produced a photofilm of the minutes of the Teheran and Yalta conferences—the best leak the Nazis ever had of Allied war planc, The ‘ext the valet delivered | ut to be bona fide, the re German paid him turned out to counterfeit. CALL TO PRAYER IN TUR- KEY—Five times daily in Moham- medan Turkey, Hodjas climb the | tall, graceful minarets and call the | people to prayer. The most im- portant issue now debated in Tur- key is whether the Hodjas should call to prayer in Turkish or Arabic | . this may not sound important | but it was Ataturk who wisely! divorced religion from the state | and decreed that prayers be spo- | ken in Turkish which the people ! understood and not in Arabic which | don't under Ho! Ataturk’s political party los ction last May and the new g party has permitted the Hodjas to go back to Arabic | calls to pra; Also, the Koran & now read in Arabic over the radio. | This may mean a step backward | Turkey. { money th Democratic for BORN YNOLDS YOUNG SECOND SON 1 TO RE A son, Robert Coulter, was born Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds Young at 2:37 o'clock Sunda afternoon | in St. Ann's Hospital. The man weighed five pounds and nine ounces. He joins a brother John Arthur, age eighteen months. “Dad” Young is a Sanitarian in the Sanitation and Engineering Di- vision of the Alaska Department of Health, to young —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— | barrier in two more ' | Ever since Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia broke openly ; Cuminform and the Kremlin, revoly against Moscow'’s domination has been spreading . Cincinnati Enquirt probably is the most serious setbac | has suffered in the entire postwar period ranks with democracies for defensive, ’ force, cutting into the strength and sapping darity of world Communism has relief for supp {ern Italy from the patry. re: ‘liberate” Italy some ¢ Magnani and Cucchi remain Communists, system of Communism, for Italy. Soviet Communism as being merely a vehicle for the ' san imperialism land agg: [ the policy, line of Yugoslav Communist leaders It is especially significant:that the Communist party should be split wide open by Titoism, becaus Italy has been more fully and effectively orga the Communists If any sizable bloc of Commun: can repudiate Russian leadership, then it similar e States will strengthen our TWO NEW TITOS the spirit of Kadow J. Oiver Lybeck dden the Iron Curtain as well, In its totality, this movement the Soviet Union | ¢ The growth | e Marshal Plan and the| to Soviet world|e ° . er. % the an obstacle act as William R e o o ph Young, Jr. ts potentialties, Titoism m: L et Tov. G ) tant than the or resistance. of ke r while U FLAG PRESENTED 10 TERRITORY FRO fEK bl Titoism i ggre It tends to on which strip s M. se fifth columns | ort in cc ies marked for ultimate n extraordinary importance attache of two Communist leaders of North- They are Valdo Magnani arlia- the One their pare the 4-H Cl Parish Hall Friday isted of hundred 4-H C and les s ht b menm ld at The presen ) both Deputies in the Ttalian weeks leading figures They brok rejecting ni the tion, 4-H C ecent in with the party N Fla orthodox the should ment, the hat defense is neec nd in their still favor the social and econormic But they repudiate ion, This of course echoe Juani Upper Cru > the club a Gra zed other state outside than any Friesen howing that the requ Mrs Abe o movement can cut a brc other country with a substant ny ial work Mr £ the club. Dagney 3 Friesen WSCS JTEETS WEDNESDAY; art MOVIE ALSO SOCIAL HOUR W. 5. C Church will hold the meeting in March on Wednesds 8 p.m. Devotions will be in little chapel and the theme of tk program will be on the near eas A moyie “South of the Clouds,” the story of two near eastern girls will be shown. The social hour which follows will be held in the parsonage. Hos- tesses for the social hour will be Mrs. H. Schultz and Mrs. C. Tur ner. All members are urgec to at- tend. 2 ir directed the Club sor the Mendenhall club for the singing wa TIDE TABLE March 7 TURKEY Di . 174 7:42 am. 02 High tide 1:45 p.m. 183 Low tide 8:01 p.m. -2.4 e e 8 0o o 0 o o for given by Womi Team. Adults, $ —6 to 8 p. m. Low tide of Moose 5; childreid eevccoveonas ececcecse P WILLIAM GEDDES, JE. as a paid-ap sapscriver w THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITCL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "The Skipper Surprised His Wife"” Federal Tax—12zc Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW C&B 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! TEM [oRB{A N [o/R[D]i] . Belonging to me . Lightwelght Wool . Child’s n: for mo . Elves Propel u boat ACROSS Monkey . Crude metals . Invocation of sod . “Uncle —* Racket . Notes of the d. . Head covering ! Owr al . G Jight st! . Vehicle on runners . Not one . Terminal DOWN Timber tree s . Scarcity lat tableland Imperson: pronoun 5. Reproved ized with teeth Veapons of hos of act of he . Small po process . Time which to come Revolve . Counterfeits rtal 3. Peculiar AP Newsfeatures s RowNd {0RTH STAR, 4-HERS. nber are Mr Dr $1.00 Tu]s]ie Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle the the fon ar- inted is porter ecoceeevcca | | ' EMPIRE }; A M from THE MARCH 6, 1931 llation of This was the f ritory. a cooling tem had just been' completed for the time the type of system had been in-} The equipment would keep the milk, 1d dairy products at any desired temperature. Dairy. a a | g ding to reports to the Fairbanks Territorial | ent there. A nurse and a large shipment |, <in was being rushed to Point Barrow to take car es there. ch was raging in the Goodnews district and had sed 14 deaths, acc A doctor w er, it le was a nine-room furnished I arage, on a 45 by 90 lot for $3,000 with terms offered rtised for sale in this day's nd and dollars approximately would be the surplus of re-| penditures in Juneau's tr ury the next month, s de from the report submittéd by City Clerk H. R. Shepard | ¢ meeting of the City Council. The Council revealed | «d been presented with a picture of former Mayor De ved between June 1900, and June 1901, by his daughte (Alma) Teal of Seattle. It would be hung on a wall of the Coun- F I F cording | y le ‘ las Volunteer Fire Department had announced it eball team this year and had named Robert Bonner, 1 to represent the department of the Channel Lea: would | & high| ; tirs Dot 1 ba eball enthusia; t, t the 1e. 1is Mischeke of Plummer, Idaho and Paul Lenhart of Seatle wert to leave the following day on a prospecting trip in the Glacie mtry. casure providing for creation of community property rights islature the previous aftermoon. It w: ntatives by Speaker Grover C. Winn v e respects from the measure lost in the 192 vas identical with the Washington State law on the *d the Le se of Repre nd thas ubject. Weather: High, 40; low, 37; cloudy. Daily Lessons in English %% 1. sorpon EN the Sta include Tes that Tex: largest of the ' would Also, the tha , too. larger S nstrued £s meanir was is the Jtes.” Attache. PRONOUNCED: Pronounce a-ta-sha, first o A as in SHAY, accent lasts 1t It mouth). Palette (artist's| | Pallette (armor protect-| un: |ing the army | , inscrutable, inexplicable, word three times and it is yours.” Let e word each day. Today’s w “They love the seq tered life of DY a WORD STU our v y mastering o ated. UETTE & RORERTA LEE Q. When a man is entering an elevator with a girl, or getting out | @ of an elvator, which one should precede? A. He should allow the girl to enter first, unless the elevator is crowded and he that case, he can step out first and wait for her Q. How and when does the bridegroom b , and also to step out front of the door. In 8 8 his fee to the minister Weather al atures at C ted States tyla, Whitaker, 92-79. TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1951 Alaska Poinis Weather conditions and temper various Alatka poi 1so on the Pacific Coasst, at 4:30 .., 120th Meridian Time, and eleased by the Weather Bureau re as follows: nchorage -11—Clear 13—Partly Cloudy -20—Snow -Clea 3—Clear | -42-—Clear | Snowing ; ordova Dawson onton 1aines 1avre au Airport ik Kotzebue .. fcGrath | Nome 001 RIFLE CLUB IN COMPETITION FOR HEARS: '51 TROPHY| High School Rifle' | the William Ran- Junior Rifle Trophy mpetition for 1951 and held its | hoot week, it was d teday by Gil e, Club in- tor. ¢ ik t t s re-| | rules \lj)!llflh"‘ and ten shots nce of fifty feet limit of 25 foulers e competitio shots offhar ithin a including team will fire ets for one po: ition only will be exposed at cne ime. 22 caliber rifles, with fe ripper lulls, and used s i will ke used. National Rif ociation govern matches wo teams each for boys and| shooting in the match, of the first hoot po folloy No, 1—Keithahn, 96-60; 84-175; En ne time and t; le rules T i : e Team Forrest Weidman, a Boy Boys' Team No. 2—Wyller, 90-43; 92-68; Shaw, 86-52; Morgan, Messerschmidt, 80-33. Girls' Team No. 1—Lynn Bod- ing, 91-61; Henning, 93-57; Man- 92-56; Lawrence, 92-79; Mary Girls' Team No. 2—Parsons, 37- 6; Barlow, 54 Kronquist, 55- 6; Williams, 41-84; Schultz, 46-86. who performs the wedding ceremony? A envelope) The bridegroom should give the money or check (enclosed in an to his best man, ) gives it to the minister after the c and of course priv: Is it considered proper for a woman'to adjust her makeup at the taurant? mony, Q {table after dining in a public res i While formerly frowned upon, society has now relented enqugh to condone the repairs most women deem necessary to their lips and shiny noses after eating. e et ettt et LOOK and LEARN ¥ & compon SOCSESU S ely. { \ 1.. What is.the pressure of the atmc of the earth’s surface at sea level? 2. What is the most popular Ame is concerned? What Vice-President of the U was accused of treason? Of all precious stones, which is the softest? Which is the largest of the deer family? ANSWERS: 14.7 pounds. Bowling. . Aaron Burr (1756-1836), for his the early part of the 18th century 4. Emerald. 5. The moose. ELLEIS ATR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU T0O KETCHIKAN via Pefershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 e upon each square inch can sport, as far as participation S activities in the Southwest in 0Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Cenlury of Banking—1951 The B. M. Bebrends Bamnik Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS A B PR 0T B A SIS TR RS TSR RS R V.F. W. Takn Posi No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.I.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. The Brwin Feed Co. Office in Case Lot Grorery Phone 704 HAY, GRAIN, COAL and STORAGE STEVENS® LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Taird l The Charles W Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Bts. PHONE 136 Casler’s Men's Wear MeGregor Sportswear Stetsen and Mallory Hats Arrew Shirts and Underwoar Allen Edmonds Shees Bkyway Loggsge PRS- BOTANY 11500" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED RENNING Compiete Outfitter for Mea SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOE BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49% Proe Delivery AT ST NSE . | JAMES W 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 Mister; P&TVERS, Secretary. € B.F. 0. ELKS Meeting every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome WALLIS S. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. Meose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Each Friday Governor— ARNOLD L FRANCIS Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN Brownie’s Liguor Store 139 Bo. Friskilm P. O. Bex 6% Your Rellable Pharmacisis BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Masic Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Piancs--Muasical Insirumenty and Supplies .Phone 206 _Second and Beward l | | ! g GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Store Fred W. Wendt Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 205 10th 8. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHY for MISERS or EODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Roeoms »t Measonable Rates PHONE BINGLE O FPHONE 665 Thomas Hardware (o. ’ FAINTS —— CGILS Buollders’ snd Sholf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters ‘SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “Our Deorstep Is Wern by Batisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Autherized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OiL Juncau Kolor Foot of Main th!.et MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES | DELICIOUS ICE CREAM s daily habit—assk for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. Chrysler Marine Enginer MACHINE SHOP biarine 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 Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phene TN High Quality Cabinet Werk for Home, Office or Btere e e e,

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