The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 3, 1951, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU, ALASKA FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1951 S e e e ——e e e Daily Alaska Empire i ay by CMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY ¢ Main Streets, Juneau Alaska ’ United States District Court for the' MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Territory of Alaska SECOND and FOURTH ! Division Number One at Juneau |Monday of each month EMPIRE /| {in Scottish Rite Temple t' Civil Action No. 6493. beginning at 7:30 p. m. MERNIC; 1 E MURPHY, Plaintiff, Wm. A. Chipperficld, Alaska’s red salmon pack will probably aggregate 1,750,000 cases, ac- Vs. Lo ‘Worshipful Master; ording to partially completed pack reports received from various dis- PASTORINO ROCCO, also known | as PASTORINA ROCCO, and as| JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. ts by the United States Bureau of Fisheries. With several districts t included, the red pack up to Aughst 1, was 1,300,000 cases. PASTOTINA ROCCO; the un- @ B.P. 0. ELKS nothing about the 7 camps; the ill-fed, unshod, in crowded filth; the mass murders and executions of those suspected of life with Stalin the happiness. The truth is that, Politburo, the regime benign. In fact, million slaves in concentration overworked millions 4 livil from THE 120 YEARS AGO AUGUST 3, 1931 il summary trials that | doubtir President is not culmination of human compared with the ru f the was patrenally Office in Juneau as Secon SUBSCRIPTION RATES carrier in Juneau and Douslas for $1.33 per monthi six months, $9.00; 0 age paid $15.00 50 of the czar Jewell J. Hill Mrs. Jack Warner Steve Stanworth arion Rhodes l':lulm T. MacAden Robert Howell Karen Boggan E. L. Bost Mrs. Marian Hedges Stephen Sundborg Thomas Jay Bratner ® o & & O 0 0 106 Fly on PM dvance the very existence of the Soviet dicta 1ship is due to the comparative liberality of the czar- 1l promptly fotify ty in the deltvery |ist government, which permitted and at times ¢ encouraged a certain amount of agitation for reform No czar since Ivan the Terrible wielded power so so brutally and completely as Stalin e ated: six mont advance, $7.80, known wife of PASTORINO ROCCO; VICTOR WILHELM, Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- nesdays at 8 P.M. Visiting broth- also known as VICTOR H. WIL- | ers welcome. HELM and as V. H. WILHELM; the unknown wife of VICTOR LE ROY WEST, Exaxlted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. ‘WILHELM; BONNIE WILHELM, Moose Lodge No. 700 also known as BONNIE E. WIL- HELM; the unknown husband Regular Meetings Every Friday Governor— of BONNIE WILHELM; also each and every unknown heir of LOREN CARD Secretary— each of such above named de- WALTER R. HEFRMANSEN fendants as is now deceased; and V.F. W also all other persons or parties Taka Post No. 5559 unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real Meeting every Thursday in ' i the C.1O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. en Elmer H. Roberts and family, who have been residents of Douglas for the past year and a half, have moved to Juneau. News Office, 602; Business Office, 3 AssOCT exclu D PRESS titled to- the ‘use for to-it-or not other- pcal _news published ruthlessly MEMBER OF patient and desperate and helplessly in the grip Never the mute masses of Russia so utterly of a savage tyranny Soviet Russia doxical and unprecedented phenomenon were F. A. J. Gallwas of Douglas and son Harold, are on a trip to Sitka, left last week on his boat Mary Ann, to the world a pa e ®es00ceeeoscecsoe eeocsecoencnreces presents ° racts will be awarded and construction started during the present season on a $20,000 school house for Hoonah, it was announced Oftfice of Indian Affairs today. in the name of lib- ‘ by all, and | of the whole )u‘u» rried out common The revolution ca erty, property held in material progress as an enterprise ple, has beén transformed into the exact opposite social z estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants. Ihu“day ;0 Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Snyder returned here last week after spending | SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION winter in the States. Snyder reported that times were bad in the THE PRESIDONT OF THE UNI- A"'va!s States and from now on he and his family would make their home in | e STATES OF AMERICA, to the pake) above named defendants, GREETING: In the name of the United States Gene Owens, popularly known as the “Mayor of Sum Dum,” pioneer { ¢ America, you and each of you ining man of that district, arrived in Juneau today on a business and | ire hereby required to appear in pleasure trip. the District Court for the Territory | of Alaska, First Judicial Division, at Juneau, Alaska, within thirty (30) days after the 17th day of August, 1951, in case this summons is pub~ lished, or, within forty (40) duys after the date of its service upon you, in case this summons is served upon you pérsonally, and answer the complaint of the above named e plaintiff on file in the above court ' J. A. Durgin Company, Inc. in the above entitled action. ! Accounting Auditing Tax Work -~ The said plaigtiff in said action | Rooni 3, Valentine Building demands the following relief: JUNEAU, ALASKA A decree quieting the, title of plaintiff in and to that parcel of{ P:O.Box 642 Telephone 919 o~ et of the house.” Omit OF. ' ’ real property which is more par- e e R aal v The dream of Communism has awakened to the reality of autoeracy. Precisely like the family has its favorites, its ayrogant overlords and the people. ~The huge estates of the more. ‘In their place are the luxurious c of government and police officials. Pogroms are no longer carried out publicly, against a single race of helpless people. They u" supplanted by torture and mur der. The parliamentarism of the czarist Duma, weak but promising, is supersededd by the crass mockery | of the single-party ballot. . h to learn as t forgotten. The “dictatorship of the proletariat” i nental news agencies that are friendly tolute fiction. But the commands of the munism report two items that are of interestsin; ! backed by brute force, are the harshest of realities. : Nothing has changed — in kind. But everything was married the affair.|has changed to a worse degree of oppression, poverty sumptuous ~célebration | and persecution. ced by the splendor that attends the nuptials of | Despotism has only one fact,'Bui many 1 Oriental potentate. | Its most terrible features in Russia today bear thel| he r t display of Soviet air power in Moscow | pseudonym of Stalin. much-bemedaled general, whose only: ac- This is the deepest to be Stalin’s son. - | Russian people with the customary adulation| It should be a great and invaluable lesson to the have what amounts to -recognition+American people, to be learned thoroughly so that our succeeding that of the Romanoffs. | free and healthy society may remain forever in- however, says vulnerable to the deadly virus of Communism. Weather al ‘Alaska Poinis Weather conditions and temper- atures at yarious . Alaska points also un the Paeific Coast, at 4:30 am., 120th Meridian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follows: . Soviet [\m(‘lmn;\n(‘ the privileged its synical despoilers of czars, American world g 106 passengers Thursday with 39 arrivals, 34 departurc and 33 through to Seattle from the Westward From Seattle: A. Armstrong, W. Bernhart, Carl Brown, G. Cabris- tante, Mrs. Oliver Colby, Ruth Colburn, Ted Daddeo, Mariano Giness, Richard Goodwin, M. Hall and two children; C. H. Johnson, C. A. Pangborn, Phillip Peralta, George Ri Mrs. John Rogoski, Virginia Shattuck, Fred Vonsild, Laura Witton. To Seattle: Evans, O. C dell, Thomas keqan, Mrs. Pan carried Airway dukes are ountry homes grand no | 3 3, I'rilluy. Augmt 1951 Bessie Yurman entertained at bridge and dancing Saturday at the Zynda Hotel. Four tables of cards were in play after \\)mh luncheon was served and then d'\nung enjoyed. The Soviet Royal Family b= ms s o Brownie's Liquor Store |-~ Phone 103 139 So. Franklin P. 0. Box 2508 —————————————————— Mis: class or e il secret mass arrests, (Seattle Post-Intelligencr) and ill-advised souls who ‘condone depotism of Soviet rule in Russia by my of the czars was worse have Weather{ High, 61; low, 47; fatr, rbarous that oo Daily Lessons in English V. 1. corbon | e B~ WORDS OPTEN m's'uséD: Do not say, “We found the dog inside the t an abso- Politbhuro, ave Kelton Butler, P.| Knudson, Mary San- Lambert, M. Haik- Knickerbacker, Hazel Sievers, . W. Exelby, O. Christen- son, ' Mildred Hermann, , - James Gage, Mrs. Pettinger, .Nahcy- and Ann" Furness, S. Gray, Catherine Knox, R. Hunt, A. Frivold, Cayp Perry, Elmo Bjorge, Torleif Wika,| Felix Heinert, James Woods. To Ketchikan: Herman Ludwig- san, s, Andrew Sutton, Roy and Dixie Shaw, Jack Chan- strom, C. Castel, Sam Baker, Joe | Stickman, Frank Haldane, M. Ar- nevick. From When Stalin’s daughter 15 reported as a lav N OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED Opine.| Proonounce o-pin, O as:in|ticularly described as follows, to- OBEY, I as in PINE, acceent second syllable. wit: OFTEN MISSPELLED: Prophet (one who foretells events). All of Lot 7 in Block 26-of the | (gain). Townsite of Juneau, Alaska, as SYNONYMS: Monotonous, shown on the official plat of said (varied townsite, on file and of record in /i 9] the office of the ex-officio re- | . WORD STUDY: “Use a wordvtnrre times and it is yours.” Let us| . .qer for the Juneau Precinct increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. ‘Today’s word: { of Alaska; HUSBAND (verb); to direct and manage with frugality. “He husbanded |that defendants, and each of them, his resources to the very best of his ability.” Sherman, Joe Attutuguk, Mr. i\)l\" Mrs. Harry Crawford, Mary Whit- | ‘be required to declare the nature = b e e e e ) Profit —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— was led 1 tragedy ever to befall the tiresome, dull, humdrum, mplishment i Eious, i Taken together and we e 5 Stalin, v dynasty pro-Moscow European "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. 1 ne The press, Frank Hald- ane, W. H. Barton, A. Callin, C. Irespected Supreme Court to bind Fairbanks: us together. This system lhaving worked as well as it has, I am of the strong personal opinion that today is no time to start pulling it to pieces. |For when you overrule the Su- preme Court, your tidelands oil bill proposes to do, then you chop one of the first holes in the dike. The Washingion Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) BN TP T and extent of his claim or claims, if any, to said property; and thatI the court declare all such claims | unfounded, without merit, and ot i jno_ effect;' that plaintiff ‘be de~ vasti, C. Castel, D: Charles, V\‘I'nn]t 1d Louis Johnson, Duane gensen and son; Sam Baker, Mr. and| Mrs. - H. L. Luckenback. clared to be the sole owner of said . . {ommunication | A i : | property and entitled to the ex-| Q. My -hwsband, who is a pHhysician, has on occasion been mis+ | clusive possession’ of the same; for | Juneau, | Maska, July 30th,: 1951. takenly introduced as Mr. Johnson. Wauld ‘it be proper for him w.qucu other “and further relief as{ correct this efror or to ignore it? " {the court may consider meet “in! A. He mAy ignore it onee; and’ correct it a second time. { the premises; Q. At a public dinner, Where the speaker’s table is long ahd nar- | ARd, in the event you, and each row, should the chairman or toastmaster sit at the end of the table? of you, 1ail o s appear axd stbyer, A. No: he should sit in the cehter, at the sidé—the most important | tg;,fig?':;;fi o b IMEme | Editor, The Empire, | speaker of the affair at his right. appear and answer for want there- Juneau, Alaska. | Q When introducing two men, would it be proper to say, “Mr.|of and will apply to the court for Dear Sir: Baker, this is my friend, Mr. Harris"? the relief demanded in her com- | Just a mnote of - appreciative A This would bé rathcf mr‘tless, as it implies that Mr. Baker is thanks from. the Fourth of July Celebragion Committee for your t in- heiping put the 1951 cel- ebration” across. Tf this seems a blame it on time out plaints Inot your friend. WITNESS the Honorable George man to do a little Again thanks. W. Folta, Judge of said court, and | the seal “of said- court ‘hereto-af- {fixed, this 26th day of July, 1951. Yours very truly, 1 O. R. Cleveland, Chairman 4th of July Central Comm. J.,W. LEIVERS, Clerk of the ! District Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number Kiwanis Treasury Suifers-Members’ Aces; Gefling o Be Habit One at Juneau, Alaska. By /s/ IRENE RASMUSSEN | PHONE SINGLE O RENTON, Aug, 3—(P—Figure the 0dds on this one; Deputy. Certified as a true copy of the original By JOHN C. DUNN For four years the Renton Ki- wanis Club’s annual hole-in-one contest went without a single dodo. This year there were five Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. First Publication: July 27, 1951. in four days on the 110-yard hole. And each of the shots that con- Last Publlcntion Aug. 17, 1951. nected mads 2 deeper hole in the " CANADIAN ciub’s pocketbook. The aces are worth a $100 defense bond apiece. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Plands-“Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 Second and Seward Card Beverage Co. ‘Wholesale 805 10th Bt. s conseientious and sincere general, - also - concerned | with the above problems. Perhaps I have been prejudiced in your Texan Started Texas' Trouble favor by the talk we had before| The Supreme Court ruled you ran for attorney general in|quite clearly un tidelands oil. and which, you sought my advice and {the Supreme Court is 2 long way I from being radical, socialistic, of jeven lieral. On it, incidentally, sits a distinguished T 1, Jus- tice Tom Clark, who ‘as attorney |general of the United States star- PoneNL | o the legal action which you as Mr.|otorney general of Texas now faw. firm, "”uzu)mj)lu.n about attorney has Anchorage Annette Island | Barrow Bethel CcMdova 52—Cloudy 56—Cloudy 40—Cloudy 50—Drizzle . 44—Partly Cloudy . 53—Partly Cloudy 59—Partly Cloudy Rain § 52—010\1(!) 63—Partly ‘Cloudy 46—Cloudy 51—Cloudy 48—Partly Cloudy 58—Rain 38—Partly Cloudy 48—Partly Cloudy § 49—Fog 54—Cloudy 43—Partly Cloudy 54—Fog 51—Cloudy Partly Cloudy 51—Cloudy Profits answer by recalling of 'your neral’s race, Federal I suppose I letter in part criticism me in the attorney ¢ Pat Neif, whose said, represented eertain oil com- pani You seemed to think, at that time, that a man who had represented or-associated with big oilmen was to be viewed with sus- picior alarm. Now, apparent- ly, you do not Or t by callir tremely hi the federal rex from oil could your your PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates to It is a fairly easy matter, of | course, to get Congress to reverse | the Supreme Court these days. | But is it wise? Congress today |especially subject to personal pres- sures, big campaign contributions wer your letter land the biennial problem of get attention to the ex-|ting re-elected. Also it is leader- rate of return which |less—except for the doubtful lead-{ government recently ;ership. of certain powerful lobbie its mineral rights| “I- disagree with you vigorously .Field, La. You when you state that the oil com 3 letter to me that|pani re not interested in whe- the federal nment le: 1 oil [ther the states or the federal gov lands too cheaply, and that Texas| ernment lease tidelands oil. This netted $7,000,000 from its tidelands is true.of some companies, but by | oil wh the federal govern-|no- means all. Some of your own| ment wo ased the me mén- have sent thousands of submerged oil lands for only $ dollars of big campaign donations 000 in sdistricts of certai “ however, at federal govern- | Maryland, to help elect those who,_syslom examinations tomorrow ment i ted to lease will -vote. for ‘them on tidelands iP fhe Juneau High School, Dr. I tide! i ler the old min-'oj, J. Mofitgomery, director, announ- eral leasing 50 cents an| Furthermére, much of this lobby €4 today. dere, as witne secretary of is- carefully and-dangerously con-| Tests Will be given for field au- the Interior, Mr. O: Chapman, cealed. Why Qo you suppose that|ditor, junior accountant, senior who leased Barksdale Field for Edward A. Rumely, who served a | BCCOuntant, accounting clerk, and nearly $6,000,000 or about $3,000 jail term. for -being the agent of PrOPErty and supply clerk. Exam- an acre instead of 50 cents. When the Kaisef=in Xerld War I, was|inations are being given in An- you consider Barksdale Field willing to risk a second jail term |ChOrage and Fairb consists of 2,082 acres on by yefusing to disclose the contri- which there was a return of $6,- pufors to his lobby? 000,000, while Texas leased the, The answer is simple: ;a of 350000 acres for Rumely had collected thousands | $7,000,000, it 1 to me as if the of dollars from some of your federal hoy were pretty good nds—with ‘the understanding horse-trader [that their names were not to be| 4 yfiizer Unity Against Communism | disclosed, That. was how he paid | \Wooden post The main point I would really for the-fons of literature which| I3 Ghserve. like to make answering your supported your position tide- . Among letter, however, is an appeal to lands oil f.fffl” you that in extremely danger-| Unquestionably - the Supreme| 18. Himal battle we are now waging |Court:-in ruling against you, had against Communism there are in mind the fact that - all the 481 es when we have to put states face a more serious danger | the nation as a whole ad of 'than at any time in our history, the interests of the sparate |and that the ' entire Seacoast of states the United States and the miner- Perhaps the biggest problem the |al rights below the water of that founding fathers faced when they |seacoast must be in the hands, set up our Republic was a fair not of one state, but of the au- division of power beétween 11\(-‘lem_v which also commands the federal government and the indi-'army and navy H 2 1. indian boat vidual states. They also faced the 1 do not kelieve it is fair to| e ‘j Topta problem of clashing interest be- the Supreme Court to call it So- i fish tween city farm, north and cialistic for ruling that way. Nor south, the ast and the west, it is wise to exert lobbying pres- | and in order to arbitrate those!sure on a leaderless and disinte- differences between the individ- |grating Congress to obtain re ual states and Washington they |versal of -the.court. set up the Supreme Court These - are ~days when we need, This system has worked far |above all things, to stick together better than the founding fathers —mnot get into a mud-slinging con- | ey dreamed. And you es. little late just; w el (00K and: LEARN % ¢, corpon neau Airpor L recuperating. L B e ] is | Kmh ik Which is the most ductile of all metals, that is, capable of being drawn out into the longest wire? 2. Was William Tell a real person or a lengendary hero of Switz- erland? 3. For what manufacture is Birmingham, Alabama. noted? 4. What ancient Roman province is roughly equivalent to modern Rumania? ‘What is a “slip-stick” ANSWERS: Gold. # A real person, a Swiss patriot who lived in the 14th cnnhury. Iron and steel, B e THOMAS HARDWARE and FURNITURE CO. PHONE 6555 PAINTS —— OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE hway Peter Portland Prince George eattle Sitka Whitehorse ar go Remington Typewriters BOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” H gt i . EKOLITE Dagia. 'DEPTH SOUNDERS A slide rule. 4 it | ] MADSEN Cycle & Fishing Supply MERIT E BE GIVE bA’ll RDAY like to point out, FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Btreet ac ar LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 ATTENTION Stevens Stores will open at 8:30 a.m,, and close at 5:30 p.m., during I month of August. A. B. PHILLIPS as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "G00D HUMOR MAN" Federal Tax—12c Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB 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 Appear! JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a dally habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liguor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 because in on Caslers Men's Wear McGregor Sportswear Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage ° BOTANY llml CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing Complete Outfitter for Men he Come out xtile fabrie . Post . Mound of arth web-like ibstance cus an_age . Let it stand . Pedal digit . Pake out 50. Marbles . Sin DOWN u $ 2. 0la French colin To Banish “Blue Monday” To give you more freedom from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVIS OVERALLS for Boys Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The B. M. Behrends Bank al a SHAFFER'S 1 nall Dugeh, don't | test over one of our greatest bul- think it has worked well, through Europe, with its narrow boundaries, conflicting and constant wars, and member that we would be in the same chopped-up, -feuding predi- cament if we hadn’t had a strong federal government and a highly then re- travel | warks for unity and defense coins against Communism. I had hoped, interests | following my conference with you |some time your. sincereity it y man of given that a would have ago, our support Yours truly Drew Pearson giE / A Safety Depeosit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL | .SAVINGS SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Free Delivery BLACEWELL’S CABINET SHOP 117 Main St. Phone T72 High Quality Cabinet Work

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