The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 4, 1951, Page 2

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AGE TWO tremendous damage with what we General Explains Why He.yonoios: domase i v v Manchurian Border; Gives | Statement o Bombmgs BLOCK PUBLIC HEARING WASHINGTON. Mav 4 P— The Senate by a vote of 41 to 37 today i “om Page One) the MacArthur-Far East policy § — | hearings to the public there was often considerable heat| Senator Wherry of Nebraska, the in the words. | Republican floor leader, thereupon The transeript into mid-ofternoon | told the Senate that the forces fav- disclosed little that was new about | oring the open hearings, which he the Korean war or the MacArthur- | has quarterbacked, “have done our Truman differences. level best.” . Here are some of the points of | He indicated there information developed during Mac- | immediate effc Arthur's testimony today some The vote was on of them things brought out offic- | up a Republican-spc fally or unofficially in the past: tion which would d Russians Giving Aid 1. He said the Joint Chiefs of Staff approved when he split his United Nations forces last fall in a drive for the Korean-Manchurian MOVING TO FAIR border. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel eau residents for the past moving to Fairbanks Welch is construction inspector for the Federal H Autaer’y in the Fairbar who has bee: the Juneat transferred to fill a v 1t hearings on Gen. Douglas Mac thur's ouster by Presiden be opened to the public. 2. He believes the Russians are actively aiding the North Koreans and Chinese Communists with sup- plies, but he has seen no evidence of other aid, that is the actual presence of Russians. 5. He considers that the loss of Formosa — big island now held by position at the Fair the Chinese Nationaiists — would Center. mean the “collapse” of the Phil- | ) ippines and would ‘“invite a third | World War.” Could Deter Russ Attack 4. He thinks the American Air| e a), Force is big enough to undertake | o yrges bombing Manchurian bascs and still | make their “Mothe retain power to deter a Russian at- | gistance call to file tack on Europe. with the “long dis “It might be necessary to sweeten it up a little, but we could do a ney in tha k5 Health | MAKE RESERVATION 707 MOTHER'S DAY WEISAGES Your SATURDAY CHECK LIST EVERY ITEM LISTED BELOW has heen reduced or specially purchased for your SATURDAY CHECK LIST Now, more than ever 1t Pays to Shop at Behrerds! WOMEN’S KNEE BOOTS TOP QUALITY pr. BLACK RUBBER 2035 '/ Ideal for Garden, Boat, Fishing, Cannery Work. Reg. 5.25 pr. MEN°S Leather Moccasins RUBBER SOLES P pr. BROKEN SIZES 2.35 REDUCED TO CLEAR—Reg. 6.50 pr. MEN’S SPORT COATS ¢ wins miey Last e»eQ)) “STOCK CLEAN 1 5 WOMEN’S SHOES | De Liso and Vitality’s ¢y 300"7.00" | Broken Sizes — 0dd Lo = WOMEN’S PRINTED PAJAMAS % Paonen strLis DD ™ Reg. 5.50 CHILDREN’S COTTON DRESSES FINAL CLEARANCE BOYS® EATON SUITS ¢ b to Seehed TURKISH TOWELS CLEAR : LARGE 20 x 40 each ‘/ Heavy Thirsty 57(3 Terry. Blue-Green-Yellow-Pink. B Bekrends Co QUALITY SINCE /887 ] censors then deleted three lines B Split UN Forces in Drive on | ;o2 s et ' blocked a Republican drive td open | § ALSKIN GAMBLE In the rough and rugged days of | in op ‘high seas fur-sealing, bac 1880’'s and 1890's, the bt 2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNFEAU, ALASKA Articles of incorporation for the town of Hair re adopted on November 27, nd filed at Ju- neau on January 24, 1910. To D. F. J., Anchorage —The first afrplane flight in Alaska, so far as the record shows, wa Fair- banks on July 4. 1914 plane sembled at was shipped in Fairbanks, Tht oi the Fou AUK BAY CHURCH ORGANIZATION IS 10 BE PERFECTED part c Utility District at two and mills a kilowatt. The is expected ta Le about 15 months. in the s iness was Forty-fourth in a Series NEW SHIPS 1 some ye y much of a gamble. Th ."I-wlu«- gambled heavily on the| ighters, both new to thess School, the Chapel-b; weather, especially in foggy, storm ¢ | soon be plying north | Lake is to be organized at 8 pi racked Bering Sea. And they gam- |0 the service of Ocean Tow, Inc. |Sunday May ¢, as a Presbyteria: tled t they could dodge the| the Alaska Cedar, for- | community Churcl evenue cutters and warships sent ut ‘lquented by fhe sealers. | erated "th And even today. when fur seai- |ing is cond ma [ TUNGSTEN PRICE Alaska miners who are produc U, that prog ALC The A, er in ton. tities of electric power, which Alcoa will Admin owatt and from t On top of that, many a cargo,chated on t tion of sealskins at St. Louis with bidd ings, [decide which buyer would get the {skins of t The government guarantee Willl,iyjtration told a Congressional| Board of Na apply to newly-discovered or de- veloped tungsten ores, and to pro-i .on for duction above 1950 levels for mine: already in operation. To price a miner has only to write to General Services Administration, S. Courthouse, Seattle, stating tion contracts to put a big reduction plant near Wenatchee, Washing- | F i The plant will require huge quan- | c t > John L. Manson, and the | Ag a.res of a series of studies spruce, formerly the Na-|of the needs of the community and niel Matthews. They were pur-|the problems involved, a petition he East Coast from the | was circulated in the community ; held 11, to capture them hard-won sealskins changed | Martime Administration by Ocean |and at a me over the gaming tables of [Tow, which operated a bargepeople vot unanimously o ama and other ports fre-|service to Alaska and formerly op- [the Presbytery of to organ- freighter Asa Lathrop.|ize the church. two freighters, built during| 7he presbytery, meeting r and operated by the Brit-|yock 5o voted, and elected time, will run from Puget | committee for this special purpos to connect with the Alaska|the Rev. R. McCluggage, the Toid ording to L. B. De-iminister of the Chapel, the Rev. Long, president of Ocean ToW, INC.| willis R. Booth, minister of the The company eventually eXpeets| Northern Light Church which has |to scrve Southeast Alaska, t00, | getively sponsored the Chapel mis- but hasn't any immediate plans|sion; the Rev. Walier Soboleff, to do so Stated Clerk of the Presbytery and pastor of the Memorial Church; fand an elder from cach Juneau {church, Tom Morgan of Northern Light, and Jack Gamble of Mem- government monopoly and | cted much more sedately, itains an affinity for gamb- | In the recent government checked by OPS cei nummbered discs were spun to TWICE-TOLD TALES Washington, D. C., April, 1851— Most of the food for the Territory ing tungsten ore will receive 2| . yjaac could be produced in the orial. guaranteed price of $63 a ton if|y iana and Susitna| The preacher the' oeateebdts .| they register with the General|y the area round the|Service preceding the organizatior | Services Administration before «m_“' Pel Dr. S. B. Fracker|Will be the Rev. R. Rolland Arm- | June 30. ricultural Research Ad-|Strong, Field R tative of the ions of the| ¢ urged an appropri- | Presbyterian Church, who will be! seriment statiohs to | @ssisted by the Rev. Cyrus Peck, | ies of crops. in charge of the mission boat| Princeton-Hall. | The committee of Presbytery will receive the 43 new members, on pro- | fession of faith for those who are| not now united with some church; X by reaffirmation of faith for those egetables could be raised in the| oy o™ ot ” o8 L embership n Valley for the needs of thel,,y 5ot just ¢ e available, and From a report of the U.|po™ e 2 o Mirom other & tment of Agriculture. i Aluminum Company of Am- congr which had been interested TR ay as a site for a reduc- nt, has now minittee. test new register for the guaranteed | yaghington, D. C. January, 1898 ‘General observations go to show establishment of an ion or stations and gardening, sufficient he wishes to participate in the 2m, 0A PROJECT :NSWERS DEPT. church, and it ting completed| To R. M. Juneau—The town of |note the many diif denomin- | ines was named for a Mrs. F.|ational backgrounds in the list of | H. Haines, who in 1881 was sec- [ members,” says the Rev. McClug- of the Women's Executive|gage. “The Chapel-by-the-Lake 1s | ¢ of Home Missions of |a goed example of the cooperative ian Church. A trad-|efforts of the denominations asso- established there in|ciated in the Home Missions Coun- terian Mission in 1881 |cil to avoid duplication of effort > postoffice on July 22, 1882.!ard competition. Through the p from Bonneville Power ration at two mills a kil- Chelan County '#nd t buy TEAM UP Now hitch your wagon to the fastest-rising star in the automobile business. A rugged and beautiful car with so much of what America likes that no other car shows such a vast percentage of new owners in the last five years! Something basically good must underlie this popularity. It may be the whip-action eagerness of Mercury’s famed Indianapolis Pace Car engine. It may be Mercury’s wonderful gas economy—winner in the Mobilgas Economy Run for two straight years!* Or it may be that the 1951 Mercury is available with Merc-O-Ma new automatic fransmission that is simpler, smoother and more efficient. Come take “the Drive of Your Life” in the most exciting car of 19511 There's just nothing like it on the roadl *with thrifty Touch-O-Matic overdrive which, like #4009-0-Motkic Drive, comes as exira equipment, . Drive—the revolutionary | cG planes Council, as the Auk Bay area was igned to the Presbyt hurch, and its Board of National Missions has supported and stil actively undergirds this work. Th means that the co-operating de- nominations are represented in tk work of the Chapel, that the Chap- el tries to meet the need of the whole community rather than se ing ‘along purely sectarian lines, and that the local churches of th Juneau area represented in the Council, co-operate heartily with it. Much of the new strength of today’s church lies in this type of co-operation. As a full church, th Chapel-by-the-L: il e i better position to the Bay area. Chapel mg temporarily being held manse sement, Auk Cree Auk Lake, until the new can be erected. JAPAN NOW KNOWS NO BASIC CHANGE ON MAC'S OUSTER WASEINGTON, May 4, — | Jobn Foster Dulles told President Truman today the Japanese gov- ernment and people are nov that Gen. Dougla: ieter involved “no cl United States an Communism in Asia.” A White House - statement also quoted Ambassador Dulles as say ing the Japanese are aware the United States 11 continue orously to work for an ea apancse peace settlement. just . CiL \RL()TTF 8P ARRI\«L\(: HERE \I(L\DA'.\'{ Mrs. Charlotte Dunlap of Ketchikan, Monday, according to a_letter re ceived by E. L. Keithahn, cura of the Territorial Museum. Mis. Speegle was for many yeers a research worker in the cook department of the Ketchikan fish' laboratory. At present she torial Home Econo! Department of Agriculture a nected with the Unive OVERBOARD Cecil Nick is believe gone overboard from his Noyes Island west of Prince of Wales Island, according to repo: i received here by the 8. Co Guard headquarters. T tion, with no details, ¢ fishing vessel Bel: inform: from the Annette Islal search. in basic'y icies toward Jap- rriving in Juneau MAY DAY TEA SaT At the monthly U of the Woman's Soc tia N Service the Methodist Chure Dryden announced y Day Tea Saturday. ciety will be 2 from 2 to 5 p.m. and will charge of a afternoon, Mrs. has completed the collected from mer of the group, the tea. Tt FROM 3aranoi FISHERY E. B. Whitmar: Claudia FROM § C rom SKA VISITOR M SAN San Francisco WITH A JUNEAU MOTOR CO. MERCURY “The Drive of your Life" for 1951—nothing like it on the road! FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1951 Ci;,“;:‘Skellen in & Chips7 Yrs.; 2= Not All Soap —Red the bulous which NICHOLS N'S WELDING SHOP i Tanks and General Welding W P. 0. Box Bldg. | R S R TR SRS SR | SEWING | MAC !?!E A Service Representative of SINGER SEWING MACHINE (0. Will be in JUNEAU | MAY CONTACT M. E. RO BARANOF HOTEL 1ONE 800 There has been a re- duction in prices of all new Singer Sewing Machines— SEE! THE MANY NEW MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY SINGER SEWING MACHINE (0, CHIKAN, ALASKA Box 609 < ~> == e d n & Pe 3 . LA % g i

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