The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 8, 1951, Page 4

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~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1951 PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire except Sunday by the G COMPANY , Juneau Alaska MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month In Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. Wm. A. Chipperficld, Worshipful Master; | JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. € B.P.0.ELKS ! Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- | nesdays at 8 P.M. Visiting broth- Rain | ers welcome, ‘)4 —Fog 45—Partly Cloudy LE ROY WEST, Exaxlted Ruler. 50—Rain | W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. 50—Rain Showers 55—Rain Show —Partly C]uud) of District Judge George W. Folta in favor of Juneau Spruce. Since then, the ILWU has applied to the Supreme Court. for ' writ of certiorari and has until September | The high court will then examine from THE EMPIRE 20 YEARS AGO AUGUST 8, 1931 Territory ended July with a net cash balance on hand in the ury of $632,137.14, according to the monthly financial statement G. Smith, Territorial Treasurer. Total cash on hand was $702,- 0 with outstanding warrants $69,949.06. IiWether at ' Maska Poinfs Weather conditions and temper- atures 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 N.md Barrow Bethel Cordova Dawson Edmonton Pm'.oud ey ey President Vice-President naging Editor to present the writ. the petition and determine whether ant consideration of the It is probable that the Oregon case will also be brought before the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court before final disposition is made. Should the ultimate judgment of these cases call for payment by the ILWU of the more than $1,000,000 in the two suits and, continuing the con- should the ILWU be satisfy such the next step would probably be the court, of to administer affairs of the sufficient reason pxists to wa appeal. Office in_ June hap: PE The 'SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Dou iae Jor $1.78 ey menth) 9.00; one ¥ AUGUST 8 John J. Cashen Martin Lynch Arthur L. Pederson Henry Roden h J. Cameron r Sturrock Linn A. Forerst Ronald Peterson Ralph Marsh © o 0o 0 0 o wvor if they will promptly notity e egularity in the delivery Princess Charlotte is due to arrive at 6 o'clock tonight with ollowing passengers for Juneau: John Jacobson, Sister Mary Agnes, Constantine, Sister Mary Irene, Sister Mary Hildegarde Alfreda. the Business Office of any of their papers. Telephones News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. involved e = jecture unable to Mary ter Mary MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to_ the use for blica ¢ all news dispatches credited to it or not oth redited in this paper and glso the local news publ appoint- the nent, ment, by financial The rey a receiver wise herein union il Miller, local business man, returned to Juneau from Pitts- he represented the local Serbian Society at the first ntion of that organization ever held in the United Stat le where laska Newspapers that the caused untold and | { ‘130 Mlie Heighl long jurisdictional dispute closed Juneau Spruce r for so many months los mill, its hundred or more employee: the community of Jur It was a strike that none of the mill employees | wanted. Less than 20 members of ILWU’s local 16 managed to close the mill #hd throw out of employ- | ment more than a hundred men. ERea(hed by Ro(kei These are the destructive 'I‘o Sel Re(ord : responsible ynions to which the finally objecting. These are the in-! evitably redound to the detriment file members of those unions. 1411 ©e®s60c000000080 cessocasscscese NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES rth A BBlde., se Was Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Every Friday Governor— LOREN CARD Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN to the 57— Pmllv Cloudy[ .. Bl1—Rain . 52—Partly Cloudy 50—Cloudy | . 46—Cloudy | 47—Rain Showers 51—Rain Showers 53—Cloudy 53—Cloudy : 60—Cloudy 49—Partly Cloudy wo... B5—Cloudy 54—Rain Showers 54—Cloudy 52—Drizzle au E returned au Kodiak Kotzebue McGrath Nome Northway Portland Petersburg Portland " Prince George Seattle Sitka Whitehorse Yakutat 8 In; 20 .0uf; busine: n, representative of Armour and Company, from a business trip to towns south of here. M. Carri Juneou todaj Airport In a wedding today, which came as a surprise to her many friends, Mildred Morrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Morrison of this . became the bride of Mr. Baird Miller French. The ceremony wes Cathedral. ormed by Dean C. E. Rice of Holy Trinity the public tactics of ir- general is tactics which of the rank and | V.F. W. Taku Post No. 5559 g every Thursday in the C.I1.O. Hall at 8: 00‘1y).m WHITE NDS, N. M, Aug. & P—A new record of more than 130 miles in altitude was set today by jan American built Viking rocket. Soaring higher than any single tage missile, the five-ton Vikin No. 7 stayed in the air 10 minute: At the k, it made an estimate: speed of 00 miles an hour—jus mder 111 miles a minute. Enroute to Santa Clara, California, where he will enter college, john Hellenthal, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Hellenthal, left here on the camer Prince Rupert for Seattle. Wednesday, August 8, 1951 NOT Ann’s Hospital July 8, has left for THE COURTS ! A DEPENDABLE ALLY - — Charles Ferdene, who entered St —— Brownie's Liquor Store ) There is considable ‘agitation for the inclusion of home. Spain in the framework being erected for the of Western ope. While the military experts ¢ i d i ND THE ILWU Weather: High, 62; low, It may be that the public is tiring of the pushing around it has been receiving at the hands of some of the gangster-controlled labor unions. We refer speci- fically to those unions that have repefitedly resorted to violence and coercion to further their aims—always at the expense of industry, the general public and | their own membership. Last week, in Poftland, a federal jury ordered the International | Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union and 44 ‘members of its, Portland local to pay a total of 5”77 492 in damages as a result of the 1949 “hot pineapple” riot at TH§\Dalles, Oregon The jury awarded $204.2% o the Hawaiian Pine- apple Company and the yemainder of the sum to two truckdrivers who were, be‘ncn‘aud severely injured in sert that the participation, of Franco's re e oe there are consequences which might make it unwise for the United:States to enter into any eral arrangement with Spain: ‘(m North Atlgtik freaty Organization | 1ons with much in' commont.’ basle Jhng,elombiital freedoms, power to' throw’ off 'their government at in whieh every: citizen; can. vote. neluded the elemernits éssential to a progressive free free spech, worship. None freedoms are without restriction in Spain The strength of an alliance is not called a treaty advanugeous, bils ¢ of sess group includ the basic oms of freedom of a free of pres gious these basic to be found in a paper It is a simil of pur- the riot. In this instance, violence broke Federation of Labor the mid-Pacific islands. This award brings to mind the judgment of $750,- | awarded in the case of the Juneau 000, plus ecosts, Spruce Corporation vs. the ILWU years ago. What has happened to the local case? uary, the U S. Cuurt of Appe”«h upheld the verdiet | come in hand: The Washinglon Merry-6oRound (Continued from Page One) — United States consumes about 14 million pounds a year, chiefly for metal-cutting tools. This doesn't count the critically needed ‘tung- sten for jet engines, armor-pier- cing shells and atomic energy. In fact, our anti-tank pends on the: armorspiereing shells, which can't be built ‘with- | out tungsten. Yet the Russians know that the most tungsten we can scrape up this year will be about 12 million ponngs—unless the Korean mines can be rushed into full production. Note—our government has re- cently received several mysterious offers of Portuguese tungsten. The offers all mention thesame figure —3,000 pounds. U. S. experts sus- pect these offers are feelers from Russia, which may be preparing, to trade w.ungflen for critical war materials’ needed in the Soviet Union. Declagation of Independence Two newspapers have now tried the experiment of asking Ameri- cans to $ign a petition containing nothing But the Declaration of In- dependente and the original amendments of the U. S. consti-| workers unloaded canned pine- apple brought by barge from Hawaii while a long- shoremen’s strike had paralyzed shipping to and from warfare de-| pose and interest alliances, based u the essentia stances n out as American other or the that n one party the theory and local 16 two Advice: now pr Take In Jan- in ythe mails at. the Laxgayers exr pense, should circulate {rpe 1copies _jg the I!;(L\l ation of hce " instead. It might L |some of the fedr he has instilled |in peoples’, minds, { ; Truth About Yoiee : 1% Congressmen are Blwj "qd‘lck’ to put the. lie to newspapermen iwhen they don't “likeY critidism. |But “it's not often that a Cong- ressman is called for a lie by his lown colleagues. | That was what h:\pponed to Congressman John Taber of New York the other day when he got careless of his facts regarding the Voice of America. Taber, campaigning to cut State Department’s vitally portant propaganda budget, quo- ted Ben Hibbs, editor of the Sat- urday Evening Post, as a foremost critic of the Voice. Hibbs is a; member of a committee of dis- tinguished Americans who advise the State Department regarding the Voice and other propaganda. “The Editor .of the . Saturday Evening Post who is-on tiat ‘com- jmittee,” declared Congressman Ta- {ber, -“hag. hever bgen called: to a| | meeting. -Ahd - he wroté just a mm} while ago just what he thought about the situation and the way it (the Voice) was not’peing car- |ried out for the good of the Am- vncun people.” ~Hibbs, the im- however, was quick come sents itself -and that makes treaties Few pon a paver contrac als, worth anythir about that make ‘it other to seek greater 0 treaty Should interf Circum- sible for are pos benefits on e with'' the interests of a nation. would in | | advantage. of the opportynity !hull save , some money; it will future Pr,isofier’s Song -|Will Be Theme For Draft Dodger SAN FRANGISCO, Ang,.8, —® (®—Dick Contino, 21, jpopular ,ac- icordionist, was sentenced today to 6ix months in prison and was fined §10,000 on a zx}gu ,,x,um; charge. iv Qontino, who ;made as m,uch as $4,000 a week M titedter ‘and might club engagements, pleaded guilty 1July 24 to a draft dodging charge. Contino |, After the sentencing, told newsmen “it’s all right.” Federal Judge Michael J. Roche told him “the court feels a penal- It not bation.” is a proper case for pro- | SULPHUR SURVEY IN ONTARIO FORT FRANCES, Ont. —(@®—A new search for sulphur deposits is under way in the Nickle Lake area near here where six holes about 1,000 feet have already been drilled. Of the surveyed, much of the property is owned by Fort Frances residents. ATTENTION No meeting of the Central Com- mittee, Treasurer & ex-Chairman ty should be imposed in this case. | large area being | | cultiees, | The firing of the rocket was de- 1ayed 1 hour minutes to elim- inate last minute mechanical diffi- The rockei was touched off at 11 aim, All clear was sounded 12 minutes . later—perhaps mir; after rolling thunder told the roc had landed. The rock hit earth about 41 miles north of the launching plat- form, the . ank Pac from about with a group onnel. He had no im- Army F three miles distance of military per: e rocket has g miles. That mar e set Dec. 17, 'man V. the missile that te ized Britain in World War II. and V-2 are each making its t:ofpower. st,''a’ ‘two-stage: vocket ched' herd Feb. 24, 1949, soared 1150 miles &#bove the earth. Sitka Seine Boal Caplain Fined $300 For illegal Fishing otain John F. Joseph, seiner Two Brothers ]’)At'dt‘ to' an illegal fishing chare i tka and was fi $300 by U.’S. nissioner Frank = 'Richatd¥: Badil} of his tive crew’ memibx dverw finés of A 20:day jaill sentence, also 1e d, was$’ suspend deéd by the court. The complaint charged ishing at a stream signed by John Kli il, for the Fish and Wildlife d g RHODE TO RLl’hFSl \T SECRETARY AT SCIENCE CONFERE} Clarence Rhode, regional dir of the U. 8. Fish and Wildlif vice, will represent.the off the Secretary of the Interior Alaska Science -Conference ecter Sere- oe National Park. Rhode received a letter fro retary Oscar Chapman tod: taining the request. The Alaska orga branch of the Americe for the Advancement ¢ and the conference is to survey the progress of beir rsoreY. hon tea OFTEN on se OF one D, I | . DS OFTEN \flSUSED A\md ‘the use of “party” in the sense and from that party Leave tha wurd“'plrw‘ to the legal documents opertitors. ' Nét; “Have: you heard ay, “Have you heard from that PERSON yet?” PRONOUNCED: Melee. e d, s yllable. N M end t YMS: Fertile, IISSPELLED: Battalion; wo L’s. two T's, abundant. fruitful, prolific, productive, Pronounce as may-lay, accent only one L. Medallion; i begins of the't 4 igh ice @ at $h to be' held September 4 to 8 at McKinley| nd it is yours Let us day. Today’s word: was found in squalid “Use a werd three times y by mastering one word es “The family distress.” | MODERN ETIQUETTE ¥operra Lim e e ] Q, When you ate 4 member of a group of persons, and one’of them 'y ‘you' 'Have heard before, ‘it is all rjght to break intp the “AATOyMation?, This is. exceedinly rude both to the story-teller and to'those who may not have heard the story before. It is mueh better to appear interested and act as though-vou had not:heaxd the story. Q. Which is correct, when a man and wife are signing a greeting: t'eard, 'Mary and John or John ‘and Mary? A. “Mary and John" is the correct form. +Q. Ts it propér for a woman to serd flowers to a man? A. Yes, to any man she knows when he is seriously ill or con- fualescing. Cut ones or plants are uquully nuilahle. ) i i i LOOK- and - LEARN % % . GoRDON ] 1. What three Vice-Presidents served during the administration of F lin D. Roosevelt? What part of the body is the fermur? Which is farther north, New York City or Rome. Italy? What is a masochist? Of what plant family is garlic a member? ANSWERS: John Garner, Henry Wallace and Harry Truman. ‘The thigh bone. . Rome. 4. A person who takes perverse pleasuyc in Pdn himself. 5. Lily family. There is no subsitute for Newspaper Advertising! 11 Through on FIELD COM] MEETING POST! The Alaska Field, meeting, scheduled fog August 14, has been postponied to Sept. 18, it was announced today by Clarence Rhode, acting chair- man. Reason for the postponement,) Rhode said, was that Assistant Sec- retary of Interior Dale E. Doty, Who had planned to attend was prevent- ed from doing so for business rea- sons. He will come to Anchorage for the September meeting. ARRIVE! m:m: TO SUPE WATER PJ;S“ %Vfl& To supervise | @ power, devf elopiment surveys,' naw heing car- ried’ on in Soumdgpn }Ar;hm- Johnson arrived in -Jlmmi | yesterday. { He'is with the Tacoma fthe U. S. Geological Survey. The work .is being done as aj joint’ project between the survey office apd the U. S. Forest Ser- vice B.! Frank Heintzleman, “reg- jonal forester, said: today. Crews® are working at Doroth\ Lake,' in Taku Inlet, and at Cra- ter and Long Lakes in Speel In- jet near Point Snettisham. bl ICIALS ARE HERE U. W. Killingsworth and L. C. Wesson, of the Alaska Steamship om Seattle are in Juneau for days in connection with com- pany business. They are staying at the Baranof Hotel. FROM WHITEHORSE Visitors from Whitehorse, Y. T., who are stopping at the Baranof Hotel include Mrs. A, B. Powell, Mrs. C. P. Holden, Mrs. B. P. Kearney, and Mrs. A. C. Brett. EKBL:TE DEPTH SOUNDERS MADSEN Cycle & Fishing Supply | Phone 103 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 2508 - e PO . A, Durgin Co I Accounting Bl oy Wi Room 3, Valentine Building ' JUNEAU, ALASKA P ©. Box 642 ‘Telephone 919 i ; —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— "“The Rexall Store” G¥tice “of | Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 208 Second and Sewlrd ' Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 ldth m ;i PHONE. 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O THOMAS HARDWARE and FURNITURE CO. PHONE 655 PAINTS ons . Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Barford Co. *“Our Noorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers™ l tution. First was the Capital Tirhes |to nau 'rgbma. unfair and untrue of Madison, Wis, which had 111|distortiof of the truth. In a letter out of 112 people refuse to sign.|inserted in: the Congressional rec- in Alaska and examine prospects | for better application and develop~ | ment of science in Alaska research. is out of town. 881-2t STEVENS’® LADIES'—MISSES’ FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — Second was the New Orleans item which had 24 out of 36 refuse sign. The New circulated after Truman .and this had publicized the to 1 refusal in Wisconsin. theless its results showed many of the American either have forgotten the ing precepts of the fathers ©or else become afraid of the expression of liberal ideas. Here are some of the reactions received By reporter Allen John- son when he circulated the New Orleans copy of the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights: “Three men,” reported “called me a Communist said, ‘My Tamily’s with the ment, it would get them in You know: the FBI checks these things.’” Another read ring words: “Wherever of government becomes destruc- tive of these ends, it is the rig of the people to alter or abol e “That,” remarked the proached by reporter “sounds Russian to me.” A housewife didn't like the amendment to the constitution guaranteeing a free press and free speech. “That part ought to be narrow- ed down,” she said. ‘There's too much u;ug going on.” to sign. Maybe _Senator Joe MeCarthy, who has Circulated thousands of copies “of his speeches through Orleans petition was both President commentator | shocking 111 | Never- | how pcuplc inspir- | Johnson, One govern- trouble. up on Jefferson’s stir- 1y form man ap- Johnson, to! of Hibbs r<)rd by Congressman Rooney New York, Democrat, editor |stated: | “There have been two ' regular {meetings of the commission since my appeintment and I have- at- | tended Bothof them, “I underta¥id that it was also ex- pressing gritical views of the founding | Voice of -Awerigh: This is not true.| |1 haveswrittei™Hething about the | Voice of Amiérica. since I |been on the. jon. .. . “My ~positin " iscthat there room for improvement in the whole State Department’s = infor- mation program, as there always in any activity, governmental ¢ private. But. I do mnot believe t this program has been a failure, and I do believe” that it is being steadily improved. Moreover, I believe “most ur- gently that the program .is of such enormous importance that we imply can't throttle it by deny- ing funds for its continuance. ned) Ben Hibbs. Note—other ~members of . the committee advising the State De- partment on propaganda are Har- old Dodds, President of Princeton; Rev. Martin McGuire, president | of Catholic University; Edwin D. | Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor; and Philip Reed, |chairman of the Board of Gener- |al Electric. The commission issued is cy of the State Department’s an- ti-Soviet ‘propagangda program. have ! |a favcrable report on the efficien- | She refused | ACROSS paz hum- ming bird 4. Decline 7. Scene of action Part of the mouth Female deer Cubie decimeter 15. Suinmit 6. Prove to be guiltless . Feminine name . Flowering D . Dressing for food LT potentate . Mountain ridge . Small 12, oft 13, ma 1" . Rowing imples ments . Edible scaweed . Having offen sive smell P 1 gather into ne volume r 1 metal faste ener conscience . Separate Agriculture - the basic industry ia; Yugoslavia. Cros ord Puzzle 8- Solution of Yesterday's Puzzl 50. Masculine name 61. Annoy 52. Golf mound 63. Has the ability DOWN . m rk markat Part of a fops | A5 tification 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: “D.0. A" 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! Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 TheB.M.Behrends COMMERCIAL Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent SAVIN hx Efi 'READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Caslers Men's Wear McGregor Sportswear Stef and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage BOTANY '1500 CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name "Juneau Dairies, Inc. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 639 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. Phone 12 High Quality Cabinet Work

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