The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 26, 1951, Page 4

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l’;‘ GE FOUR Daily !-'uhl‘.\lud evers even! EMPIRE PRI i Main N reets, Junes 4laska Empire thrown out along agency. | The RFC has | function by polit though abolishing of reforming it. The Democrat su, Alasks ' - President Vice-President Managing Editor Office in_Juneau as SUBSCRIPTION RATE: Betivered by carrier in Juneau and Douxla stx months, $9.00; one year, 1, po ce, $15.00; six mont| $1.50 fer & favor if they News Office, 6 MEMBER OF ASSOCIA Press is exclusively enf news s paper and also the tage paid. at the following rates: any fallure or irregularity in the delivery Business Office, dispatches credited to it or not other- Second Class Matter. e getting rid of $1.75 per month: $17.50. | If the administral | should without del: with a power shov hs, in advance, $7.60; will promptly notify . s titled to the use for local news publiched When Oscar ClI ENTATIVES — Ala: Seattle, Wash. “Xa Newspapers, 1411 | decided to open Br: No one questio: than sail-boat fishi salmon resource For years sthe that authority to co go hand hand fishing b acts in office, ment. Fish His departn o March Monday, 26, 1951 depletion.” They were not CLE A N OoUT 'l}ll-, AUGEA H Dunhnm. directo n Finance Corporaton, confe: a in” by seme members of cir huge ment loans, says the St cems that sheer stupidi Thu | when and when the spa a tragic level. regarded; The Bristol Ba; N STABLES of sses the Recon- that he was | r a White House “social | apie single fishery in the world. Mr. Chapman has the | in which he moved to use him in angling for | responsibility for its protection and conservation. He | has chosen to relax limitations on the kind of fishing Louis Star-Times. ty was mixed with |gear employed. rampant rascality in the administration of the Fed- | Mr. Chapman eral lending agency. Of course the effect on the tax- :“f““‘ §o "10‘0“; payers' hard-earned dollars is just the same ad if it |Hons to insure a § lost by infamous rascals or befu ierment mission of & The Washingion Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) Pari; big 4 di | as Admiral Nomur telked just before Pearl Harl for the purpose of lullir into a of security. T i I used the word r, all you' can arrive at through Europe also my opinicn a certain amount ptimism and the devout re will be no war. that, on Dec. 5, 1941, in a specch at Dayton,| hap: } riced by p 0 weeks. And I C as wrong now as I However, here are my reasons b n; at Russia will not \d in my opin- this ulty in weding war after that): Kremlin Inside the 1ere appear Kremlin. it impossible to know y what goes on in the Krem- d a personal tug-of-war is now teking place between Soviet leaders to who will succeed the aging The situation is comparable when Le was on nd the bitter battle | n Stalin and Trot- day bt clope het 9 who should succeed Len- The present battle is between ex- foreign mi er Molotov. on one | side with Marshal Bera and Malen- kov on the other. Bera contr the | police, while Malenkov is the ty, and any combination that the secret police on its side 1 probably win, T important thing nat when "1‘ lead however, re torn ferences they usual- zether on such an sion as making: war. Iy importa personal di can' 2. The atom bomb. This is still « biggest ace-in-the-hole when t comes to peace. Our supremacy in the production of A-bombs and knowledge that we could and would bomb Moscow the minute broke, is probably the biggest | rrent on trigger-happiness in ¢ Red Army Near-Reveolt Behind Curtain ere is great unrest in tae columns But viewing escapees the Ukraine and I came to the con- case of war, Rus- clusion t sia would have great difficulty in keeping Satellite countries in check, They would be a constant barassment and danger to her rear One of the most interesting s I talked to had been a mem- of the Ukrainian underground army. He reported that there was s0 much unrest in both Poland and Western Russia that the border between Poland and Russia was now just as tightly closed as the Lorder between Russia and the out- side world. Furthermore it was guarded by Greek guerrillas chased out of ¢ eece by Gen. James Van Fleet's es- opens up a new avenue in the RFC. The m(()m])Llcnls should be | hi ould have war with | to be uncertain- | reason to believe | ary General of the Commun- | ddled fools. If this is not d and hoodwinking | cource is impaired; to look fdr per-|is depleted, ;\]unL the RFC because it may be one of | the leading campaign issues to unseat them in 1952. (Pacific Fisherman) he accepted a heav safeguarded. Mr. Chapman decided otherwise as one of his first The law requres that he provide adequate escape- | and Wildlife Service ment powers to protect the salmon against undue That is perhaps ar concentration mounted beyond all reason; The law was there, the power was there, but it as unemployed. rules of true conservation. the res with the sharpers who infest the been so perverted from its original icians that it begins to look as the agency may be in order instead s should not look too askance on! tion wants to retain the RFC, it ay find a modern Hercules equipped el to clean out the awful mess. hapman, Secretary of the Interior, | istol Bay ta fishing with power boats y burden of responsibility. ns that power-boat fishing is better ing, if it can be controlled and the Department of the Interior held ontrol the intensity of fishing should with increased efficiency of power quoted as saying that the “has sufficient enforce. ment s true, if the powers are employed employed on Cook Inlet last year wning escapement as result fell to but it was dis- v salmon resource is the most valu- | has the authority to require his the salmon against over-exploita- equate escapement, to observe the jone; if the Bristol Bay salmon re- if the richest American fishery sponsibility is Mr. Chapman’s, and American-trained Greek army. Either because they had no place to go or because the Kremlin didn't trust its own troops, these Greek guerrillas are now stationed in a zone nine kilometers wide to pre- vent intercourse between two sup- posedly friendly Communist states— Poland and Russia My Ukrainian informant explain- ed that this was because many people in western Russia, probably of Polish birth, had tried to e: cape into Poland. Also he said | that when Ukrajnian underground fighters got into trouble in their swn country, hitherto they had escaped into Poland or Czechoslo- vakia. Now, however, these borders are closed and it is more. difficult to dodge the Russian police. He also reported that Chinese work battalions had been brought all the way from across Siberia to work in Russian. Bearing out these reports of Sat- ellite unrest, U. S. authorities have | received word of two Red army divisions being rushed to Czecho- | sloakia and Rumania, with two other divisions sent to the Ukraine. | | Will Europe Fight? | Regarding the second big question | asked about Europe—will she fight if attacked? Here is my best an- | swe: 1. The areas which will fight im- mediately and fight well are Tur- key, Yugoslavia and Berlin. All three are close to the Iron Curtain and all three are ready to fight| at the drop of a hat. The Greek | army, though small, is also in good shape, but the Greek people would | not resist long if attacked by Rus- | sia. | 9. The rest of Europe is torn by | so-called neutralism—a desire {0 “sit this one out,” a feeling that| I'.ht. United States and Russia are| the only nations which want war and the others don’t want to be caught in between. Of the coyntries I visited, Italy | would not fight—first because un- der the peace treaty she has no army to fight with; second, because the war-torn Italians have had| enough of fighting. | In southern Germany, in fact, in most of Germany except Berlin, the people also would not fight— even if armed. And they don’t want | to be armed. The worst mistake | | our military men and senate iso- lationists ever made was to talk about arming a completely unmll- ling Germany. This talk has now | given the Germans a ~pargaining power they never had before and| they are making good use of it. France and England, on the other hand, will fight if given hope and | confidence. Otherwise they will not. In brief, they are not going to fight if only eight divisions are| | available to resist a Russian army | of limitless manpower certain to | | overwhelm them. Therefore, what friends need most is confidence. | They need the realization that if they fight they can win, that op-/ position will not be futile. That is what General Eisenhower trying to give them now-—con- fidence. That is what the landing | | of American troops in Europe—on | |a limited scale—will give them.| Personally, I am against sending a big land army ta Europe. But a| limited number of American troops | will give a tremendous boost to| European morale and instill that| 1a8st necessary of all ingredients for European-American cooperation def our European is | total of 68 passengers on Sunday “. 68 CARRIED N ALASKA COASTAL SUNDAY FLIGHTS Alaska Coastal Airlines carried & flights with 31 departing, 28 arriving and nine on interport. Departing for Petersburg: Ri H. Gorcoek, Agnes Paton, Ed: Locken; for Ketchikan: L. Tabor, G. Homan, Mr. Singleton, Mr. Brown; for Wrangell: Stan Miller; for Gus- tavus: Joe Frydlo; for Pelican: Alice Kendall; for Hoonah: Margaret McKinley and child, Mr. and Mrs.| Alfred Horton. For Tulsequah: F. Hemsworth, J. H. Bennett, G. Bacon, R. ton, Little; for Sitka: Hope, Ole Nelson, T. Blast, William Beltz, W. W. Knight, H, Heyes; for Baranof: Corbett Shipp, Sadie Fen- | ton; for Skagway: Mr. Dent, Mr. Hirer, Mrs. Mary Dugan and child, Arriving from Skagway: Lyle Edgeington, Ed Bonn, W. Andrews, | R. Burroughs; from Sitka: Mrs. A. R. Kessler, Catherine McCabe, Dor- othy Williams, Barney Kane, Bar- bara Grayson; from Chichagoff Grant Logan, Howard Hayes. From Tulsequah: John J. Joacne, Frederick Kasnton, Glen Tabollar, Lee Fu Kim, Gin Yee, John Wanty- mer; from Hoonah: Nellis Hanson, David Williams, Mary Dick, Mar- garet Dick; from Ketchikan: Jeanne Benshaw, Tim Casey; from Peters- burg: Bud Whitesides, J. R. Mor- ris, James Telford, Mrs, Bill Stead- man, Bruce Steadman, £ PETERSBURG VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Pierce of | Petersburg are registered at the| Baranof Hotel. TO TULSEQUAH L. Griffin of Seattle is stopping | over at the Gastineau Hotel en- route to Tulsequah. | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA March 26 Charlotte Carroll Jenny Rusher Rose Simonson Marjorie Jacobson L. E. Sturm Bernard B. Mullen Mrs. G. Issak J. 8. MacKinnon Earl Bennett Charles E. Swan e o 0o 0 0 0 o COMMUNITY EVENTS T 0 DAY At 8 pm. — American Legion Post meets in Dugout. At 8 pm. — WCTU meets in N.L.P church; moving pictures to be shown. Mrs. March 27 At noon — Rotary Club, Baranof At 8:30 pm. — Community Center night for adults at Teen Age Club with square dancing. At 8 pm. — CDA initiation in par ish hall. At 8 pm. — Odd Fellows meet in IOOF hall. At 7:30 pm. — Boy Scout Pack 3(3 meets at Methodist church. March 28 At noon — Kiwanis Club, Baranof From 11:30 to 1:30 p.m. — Trinity | Guild luncheon in undersoft of church, At 8 p.m. — VFW Auxiliary special meeting election of officers, CIO hall. At 8 p.m. — Elks lodge. At 8 pm. — Board of Directors. ACCA meet in penthouse AELP March 20 At noon — Chamber of Commerce meets, Baranof hotel. At 8 pm.—VFW Taku post sched- uled to meet in CIO hall. At 8 p.m. — League of Women Vot- ers meet at Governor’s House Election of officers. March 30 At 8 p.m. — ‘Auxiliary, Igloo No. 6 Pioneers of Alaska regular meet- ing in TOOF hall, April 2 At noon: — Lions Club, Bamimf At noon’'+ BPWC meets in '{;;mce Bmwl PARKER (R RETURNS ‘FROM BIOLOGH © MEETINGS Robert Parker, biologist with the | Alaska Department .« of Fisheries, returned Thursday from Seattle where he has been conferring-with Washington state and University of Washinigton fisheries men on studies of troll salmon. He com- pared techniques of studies made and how to best apply them to fish management. At a meeting of the Pacific Bi- ologists at Harrison Hot Springs, B. C. he gave a paper on “King salmon scale analysis.” While vis- iting fish researchers at Nanaimo. B. C., Parker discovered British Columbia methods of study were similar to those applied by the Al- aska Department of Fisheries. Hel gathered information on various projects of the International Sal- mon Commission at New Westmin- ister, B. C. While in Seattle Parker went to Granite Falls, Wash. to visit his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Fred Parker. | ATTENTION MASONS Stateq Communication Monday evening at 7:30 with Labor in the M. M. Degree, . W. Leivers, Secretary. —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 28. Strike out: 1. High mountatn' colleg. 4. Bound 81. More nimble 8. Greenland ke settlemen 3 3 8. Short sicep 12. Tiny 38, Kind of 3 13. An English antelope queen zg gnmm:mds . Serpents 1 Operatlc solo G SvToh *apital 15. Postyre 45. Unseals: poet. 17. Sodium 47. Alighted chloride 4. Closo of day 18, Uncommon . Solttary 19, Thiek I Tlie S tom- 20. Patron saint B4, Wheeled of sallors vehicle 23. Diners 5. Wooden pins 26 Cuts of meat 5. Inscots 27, Flowed 57. Watch closely 7nl n - %%%I- - %HII= AOC Bonn HRoN [CEMIAIRIR]1 [AIGE] Solution of Sawurday's Puzzle DOWN Allow 1. Away: Scot. Good-by, b-ring eallog. Harden 3. 4 recious r 3 ening threads in a loom Changes cars English Otherwise 1. Easy gait 23, Reflecting Urchin Transmits & m the top Tidings Feminine uame Smallest amount Found to be genuine Ceremonies Pll oul adiclnl! plant ‘oncludes 0Old musical note Congealed water Period between morning and l flfl"fl j 20 YEARS AGO fif MARCH 26, 1931 Following announcement that the regular 10-cent dividend of the Alaska Juneau for the stockholders of record on April 10 weuld be paid |on May 1, the stock today reached a mew high for the yut of 10 and | one- -eighth. August Romansuth i this city and Mrs. Clara Effler from Colorado prings, Colo., were married the previous evening in the parsonage of /he Lutheran Resurrection Church by the Rev. H. R. Allen; pastor. {Romnnsulh had operated fishery tender boats in Scutheast Alaska the t 25 years. Improvements would be made at once to the tennis courts at Fourth and Seward streets, reported J. J. Connors, chairman of the eivic improvement committee of the Chamber of Commerce. The recreation iplace would be subjected to carpenter’s repairs, painted and then xup-‘ plied with suitable equipment for play. The work was to be dofie by the School Board which was interested in maintaining the property because iof its amusement advantages to school children. The comedy play, “Loose Ankles,” was to be presented the next Sat- rday in the Coliseum Theatre By the Juneau High School senior class. Members of the cast would be Bess Millard, Mary Simpkins, Lawrence pringer, Dorothy Bakke, Maisie Rogers, Elliott Robertson, Edna Rien- deau, John Stewart, Verna Hurley, Alice Merritt, Muriel Jarman, Willtam Rodenberg, Edward Laurie, Loren Sisson, Edward Powers and Zalmain sross. The director was Mzs. Leo Osterman, the prompter Mary Vander- Leest, the business manager Zalmain Gross and the wardrobe mistress, Verna Hurley. Twelve mermbers of the Tenth Alaska Legislature were making the viennial legislative visit to the Pioneers’ Home. They were making the two-day trip on the Alaska Game Commission vessel Seal and the Fsheries’ ships Widgeon and Kittiwake. Weather: High, 43; low, 36 clear. oo i 2 i ot P i Daily Lessons in English % 1. sorzon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: To ALLEGE a thing admits the pos- sibility of error. A man is alleged to be a criminal, when it may later be proved that he is not. If no doubt exists, one asserts, declares, says, or states. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Imbroglio (complicated situation). Pro- nounce im-brol-yo, both O's as in NO, accent second syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Thrash (to beat; whip; also, to sail to wind- ward). Thesh (to beat out grain). SYNONYMS Merciful, compassionate, forgiving, benignant, tender, humane, WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” ' Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. :Today’s word: DISCERNER; one Who sees by the eye or by the understanding; one | who disc:iminates. ' “He is a great observer amd dtscerner of. man’s nature.” | MovERy Q. When a man is going to send a corsage to a girl whom he is i — ETIGUETTE Minsars e | going to escort to some affair, is it all right for him to, inquiré what color gown she is going to wear, so that the flawers will haxmonize? A.. Yes, this is alliright. But there are some flowers that are suit- able for any coldr’of gown. ! Q. Is the posltfon of ‘“companion” in a household considered the same as a maid? A. No. A companion is considered as a member of the family, and shown the same courtesies. Q. Who should pay for the wedding breakfast given at a hotel? A. The parents of the bride. L0OK and LEARN ¢ compon 1. How many degrees are in a straight line? 2. What is the name of the mountains between France and Spain? 3. What characterizes the Hepplewhite chair? 4. What is the largest painting by an old master in the world? 5. What is a bill of lading? & ANSWERS: 1. 180 degrees. T 2. The Pyrenees. 3. The heart and shield shaped back, and the lbllndtnt use, of curves. . 4. “The Paradise,” by Tintoretto. 5. A receipt for articles delivered in shipment. | s —g H. J. STINZIANO as a paid-up subscriver w THE VAILY EMPIRE is invited to be our guest *mmm HENG Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and rece’ve TWO TICKETS; 3 aes: “DUCHESS OF IDARO” - Federal Tax—1%¢ Pald by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB C0.—Phens 22 MuhmMuleLLCALLFOI!GUM RETURN YOU to your home with our compiments. wucn 'rms SPACE—Your Namé May Appéar! b Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—Over Half a Century of Banking—1651 The B. M. Behren& Safety Deposit ches for Rm ] HE EMPIRE MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1951 Weather al Alaska Poinis wuther condmn: and temper- €tures at various Alaska points also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 am., 120th Meridian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follows: Anchorage ... Annette Island Barrow 26—Cloudy 37—Cloudy -18—Snow Bethel -10——Pnrtly Cloudy Cordova 34 —Rain and Snow Dawson .. 1—Cloudy Edmonton 32—Cloudy Fairbanks .. 0—Cloudy Haines e 34—SnoW Havre . 40—Partly Cloudy Juneau Airport .. 35—Rain Showers Kodiak .. 33—Cloudy Kotzebue ~22—Clear McGrath .. 5—Snow Nome ... . =11—Clear Northway 2—Cloudy Petersbhurg . 36—Cloudy Portland .. 43—Cloudy Prince George ... 37—Partly Cloady Seattle 42—Cloudy Sitka ... - 37—Cloudy Whitehorse 25—Partly Cloudy Yakutat . 34—Rain ! JUNEAU BOY READY, Edward LeVerne Clark, seaman recruit, USN, of Juneau, recently completed recruit training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego,' Calif., and is now available for as-f signment to a Fleet unit or to one} of the Navy's schools for special- ized training. During this period of training, he underwent intensive drill in such subjects as signaling, navigation, basic ordnance and seamanship. He also was indoctrinated into the ways of the Navy and learned the customs of the service. 0PS INSTRUCTIONS TO ALASKA MERCHANTS Every merchant in AJaska will re- ceive by mail within the next few days a copy of the hew ceiling price gulgnqps, it was announced, today by Fred:G. Hanford, Territorial diz rector of the Office of Price Sta- bilization. An instruction bulletin, prepared By “tie Juneau “office ‘of “the OPS; is -being sent along with the regula- tions. This bulletin gives the step- by-step procedure which, the mers chant may follow in order to‘comply with the ceiling price law. Haniferd said he hopes to arrange for a series of public meetings in the larger towns of the Territory to explain the regulation in more detail and to answer questions, Dates and places of these meetings will be announced soon. V.F W Taku Post No. 5559 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Mm of each month Scottish Rite Temple b!lhnmz at 7:30 p. m. Wm. A. Chippertield, Worshipful Master; JAMES W TEIVERS, s.em.,, bt ron. 6 \ b ety @® 550 EiRs Meeting every ‘Wednesday at § PM. Visiting hrothers welcome WALLIS 8. GEORGE, Exalted Ruler. W. H, BIGGS, Secretary. Brownie's Liquor Sfore "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmadiste BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M, Uggen, Manager GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Stere Phone 549 PFred W. Wendt Card Beverage Ce. Wholesale 805 10th 8s. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT | The Alaskan Hotel uw - PHONE SINGLE © PHONS 58 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OLL® Bullders” and Shelf JUNEA! %mm DELICIOUS ICE CREAM ® dally habit—ask for it by name Junean Dairies, Inc. NICHOLSON’S WELDING SHOP ALL WORK GUARANTEED 0. Box 1529—Feero Bldg. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Heme Liguor Stere—Tel 098 American Meat — Phene 33 To Banish “Blue Monday”

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