The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 22, 1951, Page 2

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PAGE TWO - 3 smart litfle plaids for Vi the smart | e young set As perky a trio of plaids as ever went gaily to schoolf‘ 3The one ot left, an authentic plaid in imported - gingham with snug élasticized bodice. Sizes 3 1o 672} & 7 to 14. At center, Dan River Wrinkl-Shed®/= ~ plaid with eyelet-edged sleeves and ruffley’ < Sizes 3 to 62, 7 to 12.¥ Right, imported gingham with over-blouse, pleated W skirt. Sizes 4 to 62, 7 to 14. All pre-shrugk] Little sisters, $4.59 Big sisters, $5.59 HOME COMPANION As seen in WOMA GIRLS’ DEPARTMENT — MEZZANI ;l"ll()()l! B. d/w Bsé’mzc/i fa QUALITY SINCE /887 | | | loall Thereisno s . Newspaper Advertising! | LIBBY MAN IS HERE | UbSiiuie for Rrenan P. Faste of Libby, M- | Neil and Libby of Seattle, is register- ed at the Baranof Hotel. | ) i - FROM PALMER LASKA 'COASTAL AIRLINES 058 508, JUNEAY ALAIKA = PHONS 613 RLIGHT Seuedures S BFFECTIVE JUNE 1950 ] Carl E. Meir of Palmer is regis- ‘l(:l':( at the Hotel Juneau. saret Van Houten of Renton, stineau Hotel |VETAMIN B12Z With B-Complex and C | Get Rybutol Today Wonderful Results for i that Run Down Tired Feeling JUNEAU DRUG CO. SITKA, 1CY STRAITS “AND __ T CHATHAM STRAITS POINTS READ _DOWN 20 Eanmu Hemea 00| |odo[s:zs|o:30]s:28] | I-EI 1] FLAG STOP. STOPOVER PRIVILEGED ON THIS ROUTE, - ) & ITKA= KETCHIKAN . ] C=SEQUENCE OF STOPS VARIABLE W=5TOP MAY BE OMITTED IF TRAFFIC | “ge® DOED NOT WARRANT X~ ARRIVAL TIME VARIADLE b > THURSDAYS QM THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE To Visi! Juneau JUNEAU, ALASKA Auxiliary Mrs, Various other Okla Americ rives steamsh stay. Willis C. national Legi Reed president of Vini of the 790 for reservation: et have been on a three d held a ranof hotel A 7. Those wi to attend the dinner area phone Mrs. Ray Peterman Mrs. Olaf Bodding at Black at a to B ing to 489 o Eskimos in Civil fence Air Patroi Among lGiven oi Bad \ nauet Training Group Check Charge ATR FORCE BASE, | Si Aug. 22—(P—Civil Air Patrol cadets | from all sections of Washington, Montana, Idaho and Alaska grrived here over the weekend to begin a two-week encampment. | The boys, ranging in age from 15 | to 18, will follow a rigid training | schedule while here. Tt is antici-| The compl ainst Sawyer pated that between 200 and 250 | was signed by 5. Attorney P. J. cadets will attend | Gilmore, Jr. Ten of the cadets came from as | y as Nome, Alaska. | Six of the Nc-ae group are full- ‘ said and were f blooded Eskimo. on their first trip | sums: count one, outside Alaska. | $20; count three, § — $10 and count five, §10 SALESMAN Sawyer pleaded guilty and said he A. B. Loe would make restitution for avrived here y T n- | amounts, Gilmore 1. He wa chorage on PNA and is stopping | presented in court John Dunn, at the Gastineau Hotel. attorney. Howard Sawyer 30 days in jail this m Commissic Gordon G first of five co on a b charge. On four x volving four otk sentenced to 30 daj t which Judge Gr pended. McCHORD August, Gi the following count two, count four, during July and IS HERE by VISIT Norway’s magnificent fjords are just one of the many breathtaking sights yow'll enjoy Fly direct.('rnmb New York to Oslo and Stockholm by gi:mt‘ Constellation Clipper. Or fly via London in a luxurious double-decked “Strato” Clipper . . . then by Constellation (‘l!ppet on to Hamburg, Copenhagen, Stockholm. (Direct Clipper conncctions at Stockholm for Helsinki.) &g Clipper fare for a Scandinavian holiday is $784.10, round trl}]r “ rom New York. You may stop over at any or all of these cities: Oslo, Stockholm, Copenhagen . .. Hamburg, London and Glasgow. Ask about this-and other | t Clipper Cruises. Just call. .. ARANOF HOTEL — Phone 106 : Sy mu.gra:-a«-muzo-,..'_ Lun Awerrcan Worto Arewars WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED_AIRLINE ~ B { ior i Alaska | some | more tt | Department of Agriculture is ¢ ! Tocall lhcjmmion Bureau has salvaged an- re- | other The drum beating of the Inter- | Department and its satellite | Reclamation Bureau up here in is following and will no | doubt continue to follow the pro- | paganda pattern ° that has been well established in the western states. What the Department aims to do is to dominate those west- | ern states and Alaska, and the propaganda campaigns are tail- ored to serve that purpose. Three principal items campaigns are: of the 1. An effort, common to a num- ber of government agencies, to hoodwink tke people into believing that their tax dollars can be taken on a round trip ‘to Washington and returned to them, undimin- ished, in the form of Federal aid. 2. A constant barrage of propos- als for turning additional acres of arid land into farm land by ir- rigation 3. Continued assertions that the United States is woefully short of electric power and that this short- age must be eliminated by having the Reclamation Bureau build more @hd bigger hydroelectric pro- ject The fallacy of the first of these tenets is so apparent that even tate legislatures have been ce it and have petitioned ve the taxes at the states carry probably return the dollar Fedc al do not, aid n two bits on to the people who put up the ash, and the shrinkage has been ited to run high as 90 on some of them he farm land Y proposals Reclamation B au, the of the dot- | flood- of nt the millions to pr by iorms. rently spending lars every year ing of the m from our pr Moreover, of that productive cleari; E is & need % The Water Resources Policy Commis: 1, an independent body, | crop: thousands | United turned intc low cost there there nd are in the be | estimates that land can be drained akout one tenth the cost of reclaiming arid land by frrigation. The original function of the Reclamation Bureau when it was | created in 1902 was to reclaim | 'dry lands and put them into pro- | The checks were passed in Sitka | queticn more | projects. by means of irrigation | Some 15,000,000 acres of arid |lands in the West have been put into T production by reclamation ts that were privately and financed, and the Recla- 5,000,000 acres the past half century. But the Bureau's reclamation work was something like 80 per- cent completed by 1945, which was during g i | | !about the time the Bureau's an- | nual budget started to increase by leaps and bounds. | This growing budget was, of course, contrary to all normal ex- | pectations. As it was orizinauy{ set up, the Reclamation Bureau | should have been self liquidating. | The costs of the various reclama- | tion projects were to.have been | paid off within 10 years by the| land owners who received water. | Under this plan, when a suf-| ficiency of land had been reclaxm-‘ ed and all of the project cos i paid off, the Bureau would have; closed its doors. | But liquidation is somthing that | no bureaucrat undergoes willingly and without a fight. It presents: him, for one thing, with the dreary prospect of having to go back to work for a living. | A great many government bur- | eaus have been abolished at one time and another, but almost in- | evitably two or three or half a dozen new ones have sprung up| for each one abolished. | The Reclamation Bureau done a thorough job of assuring itself something like perpetuity Its first device to accomplish this was to extend the repayment per- | iod on the projects, first to 20 has { Protect Your Dog’s Health (FREE TRIAL OFFER) No formula for humans could be compounded with more care and thought than TAILWAGGER MULTI-VITAMIN AND MIN- ERAL TABLETS, which com- prises over 20 different health- building nutrients, should your grocery, drug cr pet store be unakle to _snpply you, on a postcard send us their name with your name and address, you will receive FREE a trial package of TAILWAGGER TABLETS Only nutritional supplement en- dorsed by the TAILWAGGER FOUNDATION OF AMERICA. Tailwagger Products Co. 209 Seneca St. - Seattle 1, Wash. | plants | greater WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1951 'Bad Faith’ ;In Truce Talks 22 Zommu- making univer- bad out of s site of Korean war talks. The charge was broadcast af- ter a chirt-cleeved subcommit- tee held its sixth session in Kae- seng without of breaking greatly expanded the scope of its} .‘.'x‘xr :lr(‘x:‘xlfltt '::r’]: ‘::‘::f, “;(3::? activities in recent years. The nittee ;| scaduled There was sound sense, in some | arother try f e of the Bureaws early reclamation Charges ‘Ridiculous’ projects, in combining water pow egotiations were er development, flood control ¢ distite. - over e md|s to navigation with i hafes. that ‘Giited gation dams. & ' the Kae But the Bureau, in addition to!, s constructing its own multipurpose | of the United Na- projects, has attempted, thus far AR N A unsuccessfully, to shove aside the She YO U. S. Engineers and to take over il all of the flood control and i to navigation work of that C When it began building mu purpose dams, the Reclamation Bureau moved into the power field, where it saw great wAKE UP YouR tunities for expansion. ? Bureau's greatest interest is in! power production and many of its | LIVER BILE_ projects, either initiated or con- th At i templated, are solely for power octors Prove You Can—. ump it are - solely for. POWEr | o0, ¢ Bed fn The: Moraing Raria’ To Go purposes. e v A R g Power production is 2 CONtTOVEr= | out an SHhcicet sapiy of bl Juce into Your sfal subject throughout the coun- bowelsevery day. If this bile is not efic try today. Secretary Chapman as- | Jum bloat vou up. You can fet tonstipated serts that the nation has not | kain Youfeclsour, sunk and the world looks enough electric power for present war production requirements. Charles E. Wilson, head of the Office of Defense Mobilization, o the other hand, has been quoted as-saying -that there will. be no power shortage unless the Gov- ernment insists on locating de- fense plants in the wrong areas or; withholds equipment from private power companies. Neverthele: there is a need for more electric power many places. In a good many them the need can perhap: be filled by steam plants, especial ly with the greatly inc ficiency of the newer plants. In other areas hydroelectr even with their m initial cost, are pr the answer. But there is no assur- ance whatever that the Reclam tion Bureau, with its 17,000 ployees and its predilection f politics and self-expansion, is suited to construct or operate new plants. There is no point to a Govern- ment power project that cuts a hundred dollars a year from the electric bill ,of the average house- holder if the cost of the project, | direct and hidden, increases the | same householder’s tax bill by slloi S i Aug. ed the of of years, then to 40 and finally to 50 years. \ On top of that, to make sure it will continue to fatten itselt at the public trough, the Bureau mi neutrality “Voice Comn to | munist ¢ | diculou — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — punk, 5 New York doctors have proved mild, gen- tle Carter’s Little Liver Pills do stim efficient flow of bile to make you feel “up and up.” And bring hack the glorious feeling that | goes with re sk for Carter’s Littlo | Liver Pills today. tany drugstore. | 7e definite WHEN yeur home or busi- ness is destroyed by fire— P by windstorm or explos! will ap- preci the services of a competient agency. | | | ( | | e “first line of t loss, place with this Do it For your defense” agz yeur insurance Hartford agency. NOW! Shattuck Agency Phone 249 Seward Street JUNEAU VISITOR FROM PELI Mrs. R. C. Kendall and son of Pelican are at the Hotel Juneau. VISITOR FROM SITKA Mabel Danner of Sitka is register- ed at the Hotel Juneau. —— DR. TED OBERMAN OPTOMETRIST PHONE: OFFICE 61 20TH CENTURY THEATRE Bils. JUNEAU, ALASKA 2ND FLOOR the | | ...TRAVELLERS CHEQUES y can be purchased from any Canadian Pacific agent ycan be cashed anywhere You can buy Canadian Pacific Express Travellers Cheques in U.S. or Canadian dollars, quickly, easily, from any Canadian Pacific agent and most banks.. ... if they are lost or stolen, their full value will be refunded. They can be used just like money—you don’t have to go to a bank to cash them. Any shop, restaurant, hotel, railway office will give you full value for them: Your signature is your identification. For full information sece Wm. K. McFarlane, Canadian Pacific agent, Juneau, Alaska. TRAVELLERS CHEQUES . Allies HitRed |

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