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PAGE IFQL‘R TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1951 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Seottish Rite Temple at 7:30 p. m. Wm, A. Chipperfield, ‘Worshiptul Master; JAMES W TEIVERS, Secretary, - —— @ 5.r.0 Eixs Meeting every Wednesday o8 § P.M. Visiting brothers weleome WALLIS 8, GEORGE, Ezalted Ruler, W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. Staes sought to initiate treaty discussion in We are well rid of that impediment to a sat- settlement with the Japanese people. it will not be possible, in the fore- seeable future, to correct e of the grievious errors that this country a party to in Far Eastern ooy 2ffairs through kowtowing to Russia at Cairo, Teheran, |and Yalta. Japan had no valid rights to Manchuria save those of conquest, but China did. It was an act of treacherous immorality for the Western Allies to | give Manchuria to the Soviets.| The additional gift of the Kurile Islands and the Japanese portion of Sakhalin completed a series of stupendous blunders. Keep Russia out of any future negotiatons over territorial settlements in that part of the world if it ssible to do so. In any case, the United States must insist on retair for a long time, the United Nations trustee- ship over the Pacific Islands which, Japan once pos- conquered. Then, until at length Japan defend her own home islands against it seems clear the United States must maintain a protective armed wing over that area. That will be a costly business, but it would be folly to repeat the errors of the past and give away the victory this nation won virtually alone and without assistance in the Pacific. ’l'mlv(l Du_tl » Alaska Empire | | sy b7 the 1947. isfactor Unfortunately, l EMPIRE stigd every evening excent & oMP odent pae | - - President - Vice-President | Managing Editor Office 1 Juneau econd Cla: " SUBSCRIPTION RATE March 27 Russell Maynard Kenneth Willard Evan Wruck Mary Paul Arvo Wahto Robert Phillips Mrs. Robert Simpson William Dapcevich Grace Watkins Mrs. Delbert Cameron e 8 o o 0 o e ¢ 8 @ o o o ; six mon 50. r & favor if they will promptly notify ¢ any failure or irregularity in the delivery s Office, 602; Business Office, 374, . 16—Partly Cloudy 36—Cloudy -19—Snow Crystals -22—Fog 31—Fog 4—Clear M—Parny Cloudy 10—Cloudy 34—Cloudy 33—Cloudy 35—Cloudy 32—Snow . -27—Clear -2—Cloudy -25—Clear 1—Cloudy ... 36—Cloudy 37—Partly Cloudy 26—Partly Cloudy 35—Partly Cloudy wuveee 36—Cloudy 21—Partly Cloudy 3&—cmdx COMMUfiKflK)N To the Editor, Alasks Daily Em- pire: Now, that our legislators have gone back to their original jobs, I would like to suggest to Street! Commissioner of Juneau to observe | Franklin Street, particularly atthe* “I agree WITH you,” and, “I|corner of second and another spot, in front of Pan American office. I am sure that he will get a wonderful shower if he will spend a halt an hour in that vicinity. I certainly got a thorough drenching Easter Sunday. Numerous warnings issued through this paper to motorists to be more con- siderate to pedestrians on wet days. But these particular spots have been there for years and in my op- inion the blame goes directly to the Street Commissioner of the| City of Juneau. { Who is going to foot the cleaning Ibi]l? MIMBER OF A3 Press 15 exclust 1l news dispatches credited to it or not other- is po paper and also the local news published a Newspapers, 1411 essed is able ression, or to Brownie's Liquor Store Fhene 108 139 Be. Frinkila P. ¢, Bex 3000 Plenty — In Moderation Mrs. Hazel James Madden had announced the opening of her ! Dunning Studio of Music in Juneau the next week. (Prince Rupert Dauv News) Once again we are experiencing shortages of many kinds of goods, of commodities, of services. For a while, early last year, the supply situation of most things became about equal to demand.. But as the year went on, and the international situation became more acute, shortages which have plagued industry and consumers alike these past ten years were back again. In additon, defense planes began to have an effect.} Defense orders this year will be considerably higher than last year, but estimates indicate that even the full weight of the expanded government program will account for little more than five per cent of the total national productivity. Even though many mater- jals may become scarcer, relatively few real hardships are likely to result With Canada’s total actual productive capacity ! about double what it was ten years ago, a strong jonal effort can be made without the need for \ny extreme dislocation in our present way of living. The prime need is for self-discipline and mod- sration. If that is practical, there should be ample | necessities—even comforts—to~go around. ERRORS OF PAST l‘\ DEALING WITH RUSS AVOID ThoRexall Store" Your Relisble Pharmusists BUTLER-MAURO of Weather: High, 52; low, 36; cloudy. s B ot S P iependent of a the ticult, ia, in these should not be permitted to. GENERAL PAINTS and WALLPAPER Ideal Paint Slore Phone 549 fred W. Wenty guided the House small business committee in its fight against mon- how war concen- in the hands The Washingion %erry-Go-Round ‘of fewer companies. In the (Continued from Page One) House he campaigned to get the — > ————— | low-cost housing bill dislodged from | the rules committee wh it was | blocked by the die-hards . He voted against the big gas compan- | ies and against his democratic | friends from the Southwest on the | Kerr Natural Gas bill . And he | championed ‘a bill to use some of {our huge food surpluses to feed underprivileged children. when the Senator’s father came to Wash- ce him sworn in, he re- g . “They uséd to refer to crime probe, Ilpoacoc my son. Now they call me my car crawled through g st ks 4 jam, is the reaction of hen a son is better times it's good for| sore, to rise up| fail to lead. .. .| Tennessee Economizer—When Ke- s who are the|fauver was first elected to the Sen- hock troops of the nation, thelate from the House of Represent- ple, the common people, | atives, he had a lot of House sta- > craftsmen, workmen, shop-| tionery still on hand. So to save the vho run the race and keep|government money he proceeded to the faith. They may be plain, poor|use up his housewriting paper. ., . . but are stabborn in|Fulton Lewis long ago began lam- great ideals of | basting Kefauver. (Mrs. Lewis is their wrathy reaction | the daughter of another Tennesse- n in high places is|ean, Claudius Houston, former t more effective than anjchairman of the Republican Na- ! of ])Oll(‘('ln\{]. iy Truth may L'un.xl committee.) . Nothing RICHEYS HOSTS AT | rt the high places. Political la- | galls aging Senator Kenneth Mc- EASTER DAY DINNER 2 engulf the justice de-|Kellar more than Kefauver’s tri- I partment, but when you have a|umphs. McKellar did his best to at army of plain people holding | defeat Kefauver, later wrote the front line for clean living, I President taking credit for swing- not worried about the future.|ing Tennessee for Truman. Actu- opolies; showed tr ¢ more business e | MCDERN ETIGUETTE nsxra Los | Q. When a man takes a gm to the; mowies. |hould shy with him to the ticket window to buy the, fickets, or walk on into, fifl A. If ther' is not much of a line, shq can wnlk Aahead wiy while he, biiys: the fickets, and they iehiter eoHCh | But! m"’:. & very longi lirle, she should stand beside him and keep hlm Company | wrs Lenore SB until he gets close to the window. Then she goesion ahead and mts for been . secref sgmw,— Bxyn]l him until he joins her. v L1 Fagel n in ton, D. C. Q. When you are not sure whether a man and a girl have beeri several x'nums. Ifll leave awn m introduced, is it all right to say, “Mr. Gibson, have you met Mfss the near ahd middle east. Carter?” A, Yes; this gives the honor to the girl, arid is better thani dskidg | with “the Uhited Miss Carter: if she has meét Mr. Gibson. {1 | gineers, accordingé PRnbE oD, P Q. What is the preferred kind of mourning stationery new used? | ceived recently by Mrs Inez Gregg, s CTNDAT SR AL wALE A. Plain white stationery. The black-bordered paper is not used s|and is looking fofward to_her tour AFTER SUNRISE SERVICE | Much now as formerly. :‘l duty in Mediterranean coun- . ries. hurled at Tobey| because I got | Sup- Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10tk B4, PHONE 216—-DAY or NIGHY 'ulll!ll.'ml'or Twlaskun Bml (Signed) An Indignant Pedes- [ MRS. LENORE; SHOFNER TO 3 LEAVE sod}{x MIDDLE, EASK uver, mink | kick the| different corruption ner. who has U {country better—w than his daddy. The westernmost capital in Bur- ope is Lisbon, Portugsl. V.FL. W Taku Post No. 5559 Thursdsy in the c‘?fo. Hall at §:00 pm. e T on-nauutm he ‘Which word is most used in telephone conversations? Does sound travel faster or slower in water than it does in What is the capital of Iceland? ‘Who was the first President of the U. 8. to wear a mustache? About how tall is the world’s tallest office structure, the Empire ive on the new bridge across River, it was z 3 eondmm:l' and temper- | =T M. D. Williams, Distriet Engineer-for “‘fi Lm'eau of Public ¥ gtures at an., 120th Meridian Time, and |today at e home of his parents. The affair was also_in the nature|Anchorage ... Those present were: George Walmsley, Horace O, Adms, Jr, John|Hethel Turner, Jr., Karl Theile, Sonny Mathews, Minard Mill, Jr. and Peter Edmonton ... Havre TODAY south this morning. Kotzebue At 8:30 pm. — Community Center | in the Moose Hal the following were awarded prizes: At whist—Mrs. | Northway At 8 pm. — CDA initiation in par- Brince George .. IOOF hall. ‘Whitehorse March 28 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morton and Alice Vereny for Hoonah; J. Moder d luncheon in undersoft Coast than to other sections of the urgent business in AB hall. non Apts. shed before the world went insane with hall. szree TO your proposition.” but they cannot be insurmountable. It ACCA meet in p-aihouse AELP. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Hysteria; HYS, not HIS. Russia balked when the % — s B o have been uled to meet in CIO hall. PERVERSION; a turning or applying to a wrong end or use. “His vio- B. (. CONFERENCE Election of officers. A Pioneers of Alaska regular meet- left Juneau by Pan American plane ber of Commerce at the annual March 31 Commerce of Southeast Alaska. The | Af noon — Lions Club, Barm ( Vancouver conference will be water- | meets in Dugout. bring before the conference the pro- erick left Juneau Sunday on the€} pfore than seventy-five personz the east coast where they will visit| jerian Church were guests at the Members of the Senior and Ju- Mr. and Mrs. Wayne C. Richey, breakfast. They were assisted in State Building in New York? i) Ah;ka Poinl Alfred Dishaw, local contuclof and bullder, was the low bidder of 3 various Alaska points bid was for $39,142.70. also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 eleased by the Weather Bureau George Walnisley was host at a party in honor of his sixth birthday | 8¢ as follows of a farewell party to Horace O. Adams, Jr., who would soon leave Juneau [ Annette Island to live in Seattle. Nearly all the boys at the party were born in Alaska. Barrow . % Cordova {Gucker, William Geddes, Keith Petrich, Harry Sperling, Jr., Harley i Dawsoh . | Warner. Fairbanks Haines COMMHNIW EVENIS . As high as 14.10 cents for first grade and 10.10 for second grade Juneau Afrport ralibut, 1931 rules, were realized on halibut unloaded here and shipped | goqiak At 7:30 p.m. — Douglas Lions of McGrath cers, directors meet in Poor Apt At the whist and bridge card party of the Women of the Moose held | Nome night for adults at Teen Age Club| Delia Dull. At hridge—Mrs. L. Hendrickson. Retersburg . with square dancing. Portland . ish hall. Seattle At 8 pm. — Odd Fellows mcetl i Sitka .. 9 p The Estebeth left port the previous evening with Mrs. Nicholas At 7:30 p.m. — Boy Scout ¥ .-k 3 Yakutat, .. meets at Methodist churca. | Jukich, Mary Jukich, H. S. Tipton, Ed Fuller and G. D. Iriom for Funter; At noon — Kiwanis Club, Baranof |for Chichagof and Rex Butler for Sitka. From 11:30 to 1:30 p.m. — Trinity tial progress appears to have been made r Dulles toward negotiations for a treaty church, 1t circumstance is of greater interest At 8 p.m. — Alaska Potters meet w- aily Lessons it English eventual emergence of a stable, pros- At 8 pm. WSCS meets at home of D I I_ il g‘ h # and friendly Japan will be a Mrs. C. Turner, No, 5, MacKin- Y S . L. GORDON ay, in revival Pacific commerce 0k Ve - PSS At 8 pm, — uxiliary special W FTEN MISUSED; Sa: = meetiny election of officers, CIO Oelos ¥ o Seattle Times. sroblems of cluding a treaty with Japan at 8 pm. — Elks lodge g OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Ultimatum. Pronounce ul-ti-ma-tum, At 8 pm — Board of Directars,| both U's as in UP, I as in IT, A as in MAY, accent third syllable. hat Ru and certainly not Red China, ipate negotiations. Indeed, they March 23 SYNONYMS: Soothe, quiet, calm, comfort, compose, pacify, miti- At noon — Chamber of Cormerce |gate. o a { meets, Baranof Lote! WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us (HESIER To AIIEND At 8 pm—VFW Taku post sched-|jncrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: At 8 p.m. — League of Women Vot-| . i " s s Fisek At Goverars House lations and perversions of the law did not go unpunished.’ FOR JUNEAU C. OF C. ttcrs. p—— At 8 pm. — Auxiliary, Igloo No. 6, Commander E. P. Chester has ing in IOOF hall, enroute to Vancouver. B. C.' where | st g p.m. — Spring concert by Doug- he will represent the Jjuneau Cham- | 155 Public School group in gym. conference of the Associated Boards 2 n. — Junior Prom in High of Trade of Central British Colum: ym. 3 | bia and Affiliated Chambers of e conference is |to be held Wednes- | &t noon — BPWO meets ihi Tes day, March'28. Baranof. Chief topic of discussion at the|At 8 p.m. — American Legion post way and highway transportation April 3 problems of British Columbia and[At noon — Rotary.Club, Baranaf. Southeéast | -Alaska. ~ Chester will R T I posed road from Taku Inlet, nea Junean, to Atlin, B. C. , Mus. Chester and their, son. Fred- steamship Denali and - will meet} who attended the Easter Suntise Commander Chester in Seattle. The| Service at 7 o'clock Sunday morn- three plan an automobile trip to]ing in the Northern Light Preshy- with their families at various east-| Easter Breakfast served in the ern points. church social rooms, following the service. nior groups of the Westminster Fellowship conducted the Sunrise ! Services and were hosts at the were hosts at an Easter Day dinner | the preparation and serving of the ANSWERS: % at 4:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon| preakfast by Dr. and Mrs. C. C. 1. Theiword “L” % in the Gold Room. at the Baranof| Carter, Mrs. Frank Olson and Mrs, 2. Paster. 'The average speed of sound in air is 1100 feet a second; FORD AGENCY (Authorised Dealers) asset of . that is the most im- portant reaction I got upen return- ally he had done almost nothing. . A great family man, Kefauver Hotel. and Mrs. Willls R. Booth, Mr. Their guests were the Rev. and | Willis R. Booth. while in water it is 5,000 feet a second. 3. Reykjavik. GREASES — GAS — OIL | wanted a third child and when this appeared impossible, the Kefauvers adopted one. By that time the fam. ily was big enough, but Mrs. Ke- other people here is a little expos-|fauver produced an unexpected ing of E Kefauver. . .. His of- | fourth. ., . Estes was so busy with walls cluttered with scrib-|the crime probe in Caicago that drawings of his 7-year-old | he almost wasn't there for the ar- hter. His ambition is not to|rival al with crime, but become an ex-| Quotes From the Washington on the foreign relations com-| Merry-go-round—“On the surface, rained, he once | Kefauver is as calm as a Sunday “20th Century Con- | afternoon, but this covers a stormy that Congress be| spirit inside.” . . “The young even blasted his| Tennesseean is a liberal lawyer- for taking expensive|economist who modes like a tor- ki to A Hawali, etc, at|nado in slow motion. .. . “A tall, € taxpayers expenst . One of | handsome younger edition of Cor- few men who ever bucked the|dell Hull.” Three-year-old Crump machine in Tennessee and | David Kefauver is the only person | ly to tell the tale.| who ever told Truman. he didn't of Memphis pulled | need a bodyguard. Delivering a ham the bag defeat| at the White House with his 1 claimed he for- | mother, David asked the President It all backfired. Kefauver|what the circular doors in his of- born in Madisonville, Tenn. . . .| fice were for. “For the secret ser- Kefauver’s office wall also|vice men to come in to protect me,” coonskin cap in a glass|the President replied, “. . . . “Aw, re it, stum the state | you're a big man,” blurted David, Boss Crump. “My coon-|“You don't need anyone to pro- have thre ngs around | tect you.” . . . . Eleanor Kefauver, he told Tennesseeans,| daughter of the crime buster, once ave a ring through | invited all members of class to { ride theTennessee float in the 1948 Inaugural parade. “All the | girls in my class have connections | with Tennessee,” she explained. When asked what connection a South American classmate had with the state, Eleanor replied: veteran Sen.| ‘Sne had to come through Ten- Wyoming ee t0 get to Washington.” on the Basing P ill, staged a - bitter campaign to show what the cutters around Boston and new Basing Point biil would do to | nortnwaird, often can cut two “har- little bu: -and won - He|vests” of ice two feet thick in one Wwas amen those who had the courage to buck the big distillers and demand extension of the President’s power to suspend whis- ky distilling until more grain was « hand to feed Europe. . He TO KETCHIKAN COURT U, S. Distrct Attorney P. J. Gil- |, more, Jr. and Assistant U. S. Dist- i = 7 s | rict Attorney S. D. Baskin left’ on . 2 i oultry men have been seeking|the Denali for Retchikan on caurt i uhs i to develop a new grade of meat|business befcre the term of caurt|, There Isnos hhue for New‘pmr Adveru‘mg' chickens by crossing them with|to be convened this week in that | @mesm pheasants. | city. Mrs. Carlos W. Holland, and their son and daughter, Wayne and Chri- stine Richey. ing to the U. S. A. Senator Kefauver—Since Estes Kefauver has been exposing 4. U. 8. Grant. 5. About 1250 feet. 1sid — WOODROW TARR as -ap subscriver 1g THE V. EMP] is invited to be our guest Ptelutthheoumntothobox CAPITOL 'rnum: and recetve TWO TICKETS to -; “DUCHESS OF lllllfl“ Federal Tax—12c Pai¢ by the Theatte Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—Phene 22 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compkmen WATCH THIS SPACE—You Name May Appesit] hkb-— Junean Dan-iec, Inc. oG WNCE GEnn Buknarcn ARG [R[aTR[eMole (/S8 el MoEAIT[€ AT cloltIn|s IR ATV F[AIR] mnme ACROSS . Alighted . Chum . State of pro- found insen- sibility Tibetan monk | Era . Chigf Norse god Traveled through for purposes of discovery . Not one . Former Rus- sian_leader . Threaled metal fastener 20. Past 2. Landed property 1 Ancient Irish treamlined. He nlty Y . Gushed ccliea, . Unwilling 88. Dinvrer course . Impatient of control ik in to was a Solution of Vetfierdly‘t Puzzle 2. Not strict 3. Begs . Story Q 3 granch capital epresentatives Went forwai Musical en lllnmcnll - Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Ceaury of lmkhl-—llfl- The B. M. Behfimdp Wi 85. Princely ltale fan house DOWN ) lish lettep 1. Malt beverage 3 Bexonzlu tome smnnm whole number Render unconsclous . Ol of rose _ petals: var, onated . Monkey 26, Trained workmen . Three-pronged wihears . Wriggling . Take out Gentle; Feminine name Saws for squar- ing the edges of planks . Sea cagles on of Little Fellow that a crime-bu: ustgr. But Kefs litt ng up for the lit 100 per cent He dared cl € ator Joe O T ll lllfldd fllllll record for 1 low i pert 45. with marked light sensitive quali- container EB | coMERCTAL ties. It has numerous applications fl.. fl.- 15 3R Seor in electricity. . RN m_ufl/%an -flllfllé/{l//% Wil Ill%filll 4 43, Selenium is a chemical element