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PAGE FOUR THY DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ‘SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1951 D I 1, l\ E noise of a door closing coming some time before or ] | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE No. 142 Cfl’mml;c.‘. (ll askd n )lr(’ after the event on the screen, or a singer’s mouth 2L SECOND and FOURTH J. A. Durgin Company, 1 \ : except Sunday , working completely out of cadence with the song) ‘ ' 20 Y E ARS AG 0 -,f{‘i_’{nE EMPIRE (Monday of each month Accounting Auditing Tax Work .m.m nntu\(. Company Noresliks the. eound -Gratll Kee phistographed on ghe . ,‘ggmgsha?l;fgeml:} Room 3, Valentine Building § 5 film alongside the picture, and ehlin ety & \un F ,M TARP ke e & gcm 'rn‘l:;i d JUNEAU, ALASEA impressionably the picture and the sound are wed : AUGUST 18, 1931 Worshipful Master; 3 P.O.Box 62 Telsphons 8§19 perfectly ; JAMES W. LEIVERS ; - The talking picture opened up not only a new Miss Mary Jane Anderson. who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. S. | ) Becretary 1 AUGUST 18 Whittier for the past two months. left today for her home in Port Town- o) A.098. 8.5 9 ¢ v L : n‘ > end. She is a niece of Mrs. Whittier. @ B P 0 ELKS M.PII:E :VA:WT.AD.S P‘AY. : vistas of documentary and educational possibilitic Adolph Heirsch all since 1926 Mrs. M. E. Rennie Meeting Second and Fourth Wed Mrs, C. D. Beale An outgoing passenger on the Prince Henry today for Seattle was | Desdays at 8 PM. Visiting broth- Mrs. C. K. Tisdale Mrs, M. W. Coolbaugh. She is a niece of Frank Cook and has been his | €8 Welcome. "Th B ]l S g M R \est for some time. She also visited with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sutton | LE ROY WEST, Exaxited Ruler. e Hexall Sore ol 110 Mr. and Mrs. Norman Cook. She is returning to her home in Spring- | W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. our REILHS Erattincion Grace Miller s 3 icld, Mo i Sl i BUTLER-MAURO DR . Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hill and two-year-old son arrived on the Aleu- Hoose Lodge “o' 70 UG Co s {ian this morning from Healy Forks for a few days visit in Douglas|| Regular Meetings Every Friday Carl Weidman Governor— i 4 | befor roceding vacation trip. Mrs. Hill is the daughter Audrey Dudueff efore proceding south on a vacal LOREN C. | M ";M“‘”m G‘:f“,m of James Edmiston. Secref AlaSka“ lc Sllpply M. Agatl aves [ tary— i baesiy Uu Marjorie Ann Mueller % WALTER R. HERMANSEN Paul Johnson Passengers arriving in Juneau this morning on the Yukon from : Planos—Mausical ll.tru—-. and Supplies V. O. Mouert cattle were: George Baggen, D. L. Crawford, Mrs. Crawford, W. A. Mrs. Josephine Wright faton, R. E. Henning, Sigrid Johnson, G. W. Nostrand, Doris Oeander, Phone 208 Second and Seward Norman Wood 0. M. Olson, Viola Ott, Mrs. Bessie Rowe, H. A. Sabin, Mr. and Mrs. v. r. '. Thelma Osbhorne Jim Drawe | Peter Schmitz, Elsie Schmitz, Sixe White. T I Pfl" .fl. 555’ c.rdneverage co. hristis sience Monitor) e o o 0o 0 o o o " (Christian Science Monitor Mr. and Mrs. A. Van Mavern and Richard McGinnis are Juneau| Meeting every Thursday in ‘Wholesale 805 10th Bt. There 1s & dWEIIGE Bta betyeen souvenirs of War passengers aboard the Princess Charlotte due to arrive here tonight. the C.IO. Hall at 8:00 p.m. and spoils of war. There is another dividing line b ‘ £ PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT Saturday, Anmnl 18, 1951 tween liberating a friendly nation and defeating an ea er a W. A. Eaton, well known mining man woh is interested fh the Taku | Fr—_——_—m_m_ for MIXERS or SODA POP — —— ghemy naton In the confusion of war and-n the River district, arrived here from Seattle this morning. H ik Z jwidespread enthusiasm of victorious troops for col- " o e i N A S ]l 5 “TA 1" ANNIVERSAR tikoting ahin e Al g lines are casily { TALKIE . jlecting souvenirs, both those dividing lines are casily as a OIn s The motorship Estebeth arrived here from Sitka with the following|| SALES and SERVICE The Alaskan Hotel crossed . passengers for Juneau: From Chichagof: Frank Metcalf, Ainer Wasdahl, ) Americans have grown o The $100,000 leopard-skin rug sent home from M. Goldberg, W. Holbrook, Bud Datson. From Tenakee: Carl Nelson, | sog}{gtlETghNoSnlzr‘éBkogas Ne:‘ly mv-h:annl.:._ reen Reasonal v,p;l(” ;,““‘“.:\h ‘_f'lu,::\”,':”;j,Ap:zkm;;i'Ef:,r::l (::‘u.,:;:A:I:::I:l;lmu;mic:x:fd l; i {f‘-“»,’.“.,p:';-m» Weather conditions and tempera- | joe Benson, R. W. McBride, J. T. Padden. From Hoonah: Mr. and ; 'u“ b “.;m; b 'K’\mm.‘w”p;l “h’-)- hfiflrd M;l*,‘(-l‘w"\ (th«““)‘-‘x;m 4 ‘;]:'h' 4‘:‘1:21}“::?:“&\ mfms also | Mrs. John Anderson, George Jones, David Kadasha, J. W. Hunt. From PHONE SINGLE O gencrations remember quite well the be-|pocsession of it during the time écn||v \‘ repe :mw;lv 120th M‘,.‘,m],m ,I.;” 5 _ + | Funter: Charles Johnson, John Kliener, Akim Ploc, Ed Fuller, G. H. of the new cpoch that was ushered In 25| changing hands, the fact remains that it s a Korean|bY_the Weather - Sur e s M RS T new o i b ; : ! ol [ e rrom Sitka: Elaine Martinson. quor Jiore THOMAS HARDWARE azo this month, when Warner Bros. presented |national treasure which belongs to the Republic of : | and FURNITURE CO. m of sound films at the old Warner We are sure it will be so recognized by the |Anchorage 5 y | ; i : e Fhetis 165 139 B Friskis PHONE 656 7 2d 52nd St. in New York City. | soldier in question and by his family, and will find | Apnette Island 52—Cloudy b R AR i T P. O. Box 2508 < ezt | Barrow 39—Cloudy Sl PAINTS —— OILS then President of the Motion Picture|its way back where it belongs. £ s . ok d | Bethel 0—Cloudy 'g Builders’ and Shelf ] § § Matter arricr in : 5 per month; six months, §9.00; c epoch in the field of entertainment but postage paid t g rates o vance, $7.50 It was thrce years later, in the summer that talking pictures first came to Juneau Movietone News and Vitanhone News pictures were | i to the use for [being shown along with silent features at the Coli- L or mot ether |seum. In mid-July ain all-sound all Vitaphone pro- gram was advertised the W. D. Gross theatre. S I AUGUST 19 TATIVES Alaska Newspapers, 1411 It was not much later that Spickett's Palace il began showing sound picture That year the theatres were still programming organ concerts. The transition from silents to tound was not immediate and there were a lot of good silent pictures shown in town after th sound equip- ment was installed. That seems a long time ago. Among My Souvenirs and Distributors of America, first spoke But the record of American troops in the last war | 5 HARDWARE s Cordova 45—Cloud . H . then was followed by a movie |indicates the need for higher standards in such : A%l Da”y Lessons in Engllsh by & A aoh ound of the New York Philharmonic | matters. The many GI's lost their lives st for N —Partly Cloudy W. L. GORDON NICHOLSON’S WELDING Orchestra, Mischa Elman, Marion Talley, Efrem Zim-1souvenirs in the midst of battle, uch happy- | Fairbanks 47—Cloudy | Leeeee SUSUSSUS TSP PUGU U { SHOP Remington Typewriters +, Harold Bauer, Roy Smeck, Giovanni Martenelli, [go-lucky looting accompanied the arrival of the aine ain WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: INGENIOUS means talsnted or cléver, Tanks and General Welding SOLD and SERVICED by e, the Casinos and the Metropolitan Opera |even in liberated areas. Too much trading ;| Havre o DOTS tbass bb /s Eet i ichin e : ; S it $ S On ha B } IO | Suneau Atrport 2 Rain | INGENUOUS means of a superior character, noble, generous. ALL WORK GUARANTEED J B Bll'lfll'd co 1 by t ral public, though,|song on rapidly e S e : islo| OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Radiator. Pronounce first A a5 1| p o, Boy 1526 Feero Bldg, b remembered by the general p 3 .| song on rapidly organized black market K Rir 6_Partly Cloudy |RAY, not as in RAT. A “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Al Jolson delivered the first line of dialogue Such happenings, to be sure, are the usual accom- | yrocGrath 48—Rain | OFT) MISSPELLED: Burro (a donkey). Burrow (a hole in the Satisfied Customers™ in dern talking feature picture, “The Jazz|paniment of war. Among the Americans they were) Nome 40—Partly Cl“‘“‘"‘"rv'm(l or to excavate a hole) sin Prophetically, his line was “You ain frequently balanced by an easygoing generosity tc rthwas 42—Cloudy | gyNONYMS: Salute, hail, greet, address, accost. speak to. STEVENS, FORD AGENCY nothin’ ye Al ward gotquetal Quitioccuplell BRI, | Yo, (Chepih P0—FORY | WwORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yoours.” Let us (Authorized Dealers) s been vast technical improvements!this mitigating factor American troops showed them-|Port 54—Clear . alars By t . i each d Today'’s word: 3 { 4 i ; Partly Cloudy | increase our vocabulary by mastering one grord each d ay. Today's wor LADIES’—MISSES’ GREASES — GAS — OIL on the ¢ techn S ining pictures and]selves less dis i hs SC e @ s n respect of | e 3 y n th niques of combi g P! selves less disciplined than some others in respect of | 50—Partly Cloudy INSOLUBLE; not to be solved or explained. “These are the inscluble READY-TO-WEAR J “ c uneau Motor Co. sound discarded is the separate recordin?|the property of other peoples. The wealthiest nat 5 d 4 i § e 53—Rain | riddles of life. & which had to be synchronized with the film (and!in the world cannot afford this kind of souvenirs| ’ SRRt <2t | ( o e e < pr 121 [SENSSEIECOR i Fuird Foot of Main Street 1 | sometimes led to embar g results, such as the of war. ¢ 50—Cloudy . . g R ; M 0 D ERN ETIQUETTE %perra Lek ||| The Charles W. Carter ol Sy T Selediive Service S@LGLEL i ¥ 3 DELICIOUS ICE CREAM Me"y-Go-Round 000 members in 32 countries | EDITOR, THE EMPIRE: : Morluary $iiel R EL a dally habit—ask for it by name Continned™Trom* Pagé Oney~ (Rl auother five and half. mil~ i'?(‘ak (Onser 7| Q. What are the required decorations for a home christening? Fourth and Franklin Sts. ) s I . lion in the United States, the: I believe that everyone in Juneau| = ! A. That of the “font,” which is always a bowl — usually silver — PHONE 136 J s_s : i . uneau Lairies C i e - ——— | AF.L. Trades and Labor Congress|who has contributed he cost of \\}n Ps,agl Problems { put on a small high table. Most people prefer to have the table covered the State Department's|of Canada, the C.I.O. Canadian (the new Memorial Library must 19 i | with something dark — old brocade or velvet. In the center of the table, proj da effort . is seriously | Congress of Labor, and the Inter- |vi he st th a high de- i o i i I | reprc-entative from the | [loWers are arranged in a flat circle, blossoms around the outside, scemsl caslers “en s wear HOME GROCERY hamstrung by congressional p ational Federation of Free Jour jon. T ¥ ‘ { toward the center and coverd by the base of the bowl, which is set within pinching, while the American |nalists, comprising about 1,000 | of givers includes practically every- te regional field office of the | { McGregor Sportswear Ph 146 342 milit men who now dominate [ newsmen exiled from Soviet coun- {one in town. Rarely has & com- ervice system to make | this circle. Stetson and Mallory Hats our foreign policy believe that the| tries. unity project brought forth such|! trip is Army Capt. O.| Q. Should one use a fork to place butter on a piece of bread or{ Arrow Shirts and Underwear z only way to stop Russia is to have| The chief dynamo in this in-|Wid d’and generous support. who is here to assist |biscuit? { Allen Edmonds Shoes Home ‘Liquor B ‘Tel. 699 | war chiefly {rom Belgium The Washingon et B e Li‘(ommum@i;gn | } federation of women’s clubs wit more and bigger -guns. They have | tricate operation has been Abbott |Donations ranged from the nick John McCormick, Alaska directof;| A, No; the knife should be used for this purpose. The fork is used, Skyway Luggage American Meat — Phone 33 little faith in psychological w Washburn, loaned by General |0f school children to $2,000 gifts| however, for placing butter in a baked potato. | with service problems. i fare. Accordinzly, the National Se- | Afills of Minneapolis to the com- [from individuals, business houses| yyagner, who arrived in June;\u‘ Q. Does an unmarried girl's visiting card bear the prefix “Miss"? BOTANY To Banish “Blue Monday” L m ” To give you more freedom from work — TRY CLOTHES Alaska Laundry NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing H. S. GRAVES curity incil has ruled out any|mittee for Free Europe which has|and community organizations. early this week, will remain here A. Yes; and the card should bear her real name, never a nick- trong appeals to the people 1) done such an important job of | The building will be turned over|until August 22 name—“Miss Elizabeth Jones,” not “Miss Betty Jones.” the Iron Curtain countries t0 Ye-| heaming broadcasts into Czecho-|to us early this fall, possibly in. The regional office, which main- volt, sabotage, or disrupt their|sovakia and placed the freedom|late September and at that time|tains liaison with offices in Ore- | cominform governments. Lell in Berlin last year. Harold |the final share of our cost of thelgon, Washington, Idaho and Alas- Zet I e Stass vho heads the Crusade project due. After that date, any |k as established in March this | vet chological warfare to be | Stassen, w _project is due. After that date, any was es arc cucocssful must offer something— | 10F Freedom, has also helped to|unpaid balance will start to draw)year by Col. Ernest W. }inwell,\ an A C. GORDON a chance for freedom, for peace, mastermind the operation. At the|interest. now in charge of the Seattle re- more food or an end of oppres-|initial balloon launching from| while most of the pledged funds|gion. Col. Howell's office repre- sion. American propaganda fre- M““_{E)L Germany, were BOIL"I'?“" or the Library have already been;sents Gen. Lewis B. Hersh . What is the latitude of the North Pole? e g quently fails hecause it offers| Wiersblanski of Poland, (3ecrge |paid, some,of the pledges Have not{rector of selective service, in . What ancient people first introduced the alphabet into Europe? The Clothing nothing jf‘i"’"‘““ _“fFr‘}“: fi“:’:“;"]’i‘fl" F‘!g‘rfi;u yet been redeemed, and the Mem-|northwest area. i # . Where was the first subway in the United States? I"RED l‘lfl"fllfli LEVPS OVERALLS The citizen of Czechoslovakia is|ation or Fre B4 orial Library Committee earnestly| Though this is his fir . What three Presidents of the U. S. were married while in office? Complete Outfitter for Men for Boys 3 re Lotte Stoehr of Germany and Mrs. to Alaska, Capt. Wagner . not interested in hearing foreign Siseig requests of those who have not fully o T i Can you name three animals whose names end with the letter radio broadcasts tell him the So-[Robert Taylor, both of the Feder- | paiq that they arrange at once|to make two or three trips a year |, v tem is evil. He knows the|ation of Women's Clubs. to pay the balance in one payment | for onal headquarters. SHAFFER'S PR . BLACKWELL’S ; i — ANSWERS: system is evil; what he is sidert especially sig- | OF through a series of installment g y It is considered especially sig : . Ninety degrees north. SAHITHY mr CABINET SHOP wants to hear from the Voice of|pificant in Europe that these ball- j Payments. the construction of this beautiful | Hin 3 America are ways by which he|gons are being aimed at Czecho-| Every contributor counted on ev-|building in time to take advantage | . The Phoenicians. FOR BETTER MEATS 117 Main Phone 73 can throw off the yokeof oppres-|clovakia after the imprisonment |€ry other to meet his pledged con-|of the federal grant-in-aid which 3. Boston; completed in 1898. 13—PHONES—49 High Quality Cabinet Work jon. Such advice under the Na-!.r william Oatis and that among | tribution. Only this mutual trust|\\‘n\ made available to us last year. | . Wilson, Tyler and Cleveland. 2 tional Security council's present|yhey gponsors are the Federation |made it possible to go ahead with | . Fox, lynx, ox. -~ pol nnot be given officially.|of Free Journalists. Hitherto the |mom—— i o s E | Meanwhile, Soviet psychological | ynted States' official policy has e e e —— Tk i e LT S R {There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! 2. L DAVLIN prescors, and nose-thumbing at|peen seized by the cominform. o o bourgeoise masters Thus, important concessions were [ gg ; 5 % =~ 3 Stalin's Achilles' Heel given to Hungary to obtain Rob- e - 0 as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA gtk GRS b b : e Crossword Puzzle laRE ¢ ; EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING tackled | However, it is now realized that| SEEEEZZT 2 i ! EIR| - Present this coupon to the box office of the ; to make | the more you pay out in conces 7 ACROSS Medleval curtain | ions to.the Soviel. the more Mo : : Bior voen i towerat i CAPITOL THEATRE 3 nvinced from!cow demands in ransom money i Expunged % » Desist i 6. winter's study of the Iron|and the more it is inclined to : T e 3 countries and from other | maltreat American citizens and : [ 18, Sign of the 4 Exist BMEL‘H 1 Ic) and receive TWO TICKETS to see: rmation that it's not the at-|to increase the blackmail demands. . &odiac ‘through [R[E[S] nmr‘fln " e bomb but contact with free|America’s cracking down o Czech |- 7 3 Lo | ;‘fi:":: set 4 Ea plaat EEE jaa] nmg DEE ABCTIC flmY t t the Soviet fears most.i trade is an indication of this new 2 16. Depict test iclolTl1VI[E : of Soviet peoples is' stiifening of policy by the U ; | Pumdise 48 State Iole[plols] T iTlo/RMMEINID) Federal Tax—12c¢ Paid by the Theatre Achilles' heel. He's!and current balloon operation ¥ from sea- b3. Masculine S INCIWIN[EMW[SIMSITIV] (§ over American air| supplements it. This may help to s 3 |y ot Sy i Pllone M—YEIJ.UW cu co.—"llllc zz it is — 'rxl even | show the cominform that, instead £ 1 = ,‘::“fi, se. L Solution of Yuurdly'u Puzzle and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and. WESDONS S, B0l taking ‘tha abuse. &b OHC. E4 ; ; c . Cloaning tm- 67 Quoted DowN 3. Declde RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. the general dis-|zens l down, we intend to,re- 7 plement 58. Rim 1. Russian cols 4, Former times tellite and Russian | taliate. i Pl [ South Amert- BY. "'c'ukn}fl, 2 Turkish 5. English baniee WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Moscow's unpopular Story of Friendship / i | S e N, & Moditerrancan Around Europe — Germans crowd | g7 . 3 me’;fl, i if we are to win the|around the balloon truck convoy 1 ¥ jons over to OUr|when it sets up operations at / J : .. Armp Oldesl Bank in Alaska / i must inspire them, en-|night like kids watching circus ‘ase them and above all, keep| wagons unload at home . . . One : = = & 1] e 1 in ct t s be-| trouble is to keep the crowds from - eace 2 in contact with them. It was trouble is ¥ 7 B e Statin mortally feared such | gmoking when near the hydrogen . v h o . 7 uliisy —Uver a Century ot Banking— contact that he erected the Iron|tanks. . . . Radio Free Europe, W / F to hit !hh operated partly by Czech refugees flitary, - C'umm and it & y by ¢ : 3 3 A s s s Crctae o Fredom, as o : e W/////WIIIWIH//EII. i g eB. ehren vate muxvmu als and orx,aml-tlm"‘ Crusade for Freedom, has poured - ,4 now launched messages Of[a daily barrage of messages (o : “ w. . 3. P 2 B l hope, friendship and encourage- the Czech people giving them the & £ % . Arge . ment by balloon into Czechoslo- | story of friendship balloons. . . . & % i sugges astic alloons = H - surface vakia. It suggests plastic ]ulluw_ bal - { n..fl The people who had the cour-|pe used for food containers. . . a i Superficial sufe‘y Depfls“ ge to sponsor this project arc|Leaflets are found inside the pol- 9 " . :}:E A’;n -l‘Lan Crusade for Free- |low balloons after they settle on ; ot Zeaian Baxes f R t dom orzanization, the inter-Am-|the ground. . .. The Jarge rubber 4 flnfl.. .fl%/“.. 0" e” erican federation of free trade|palloons burst at 30,000 feet al- unions which has been fighting | titude and the leaflets nside stem i throughout Latin | them are scattered gradually to : /h /4 49. Moccasin R T The: Smear Artist Snm dum[l America, veterans or