The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 28, 1951, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Publishied ‘every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Juneau Alaska Second and Main Stree HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - ARCHIE E. CAMPBELL - - - Entered in the Post Off SUBS Delivered by carrier in Juncau and Doucl: six_months, $0.00; one ¥ By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: One vear, in advance, $15.00; six month one month, fn advance, $1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor !f they the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery of their papers. Telephones N vs Office, 602; Business The Adsoclated Press is exclusively entl republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not | R ARy wike credited In this paper and also the local news published; CAN'T WE herein. " NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES Fourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash Second Class Matter. for £1.35 per month; BER OF ASSOCIATED PRE song of Moscow. Remember, Mr - Vice-President Manaeing Editor | among the Americans who today, plane, are inclined to take at face value the asertions | o from the Soviet Union, the Chinese Commusists and | e the North Koreans tions.” $17.50 s, in advance, $7.50; will promptly notifs Office, 374. itled to the use for other- Aluska Newspapers, 1411 ( Some people think it dates back to the First World Tuesday, August 28, War . . i There are thos sembly line started Century . . . Some blame the Day Is the Evi sions and wars . The analysts w tional behavior . . About this, tho Something has something serious. th COEXISTENCE WON'T WORK Are those people who were so entranced with the prospect of peace when Mr. Malik suggested an armi- stice two months ago still of the same opinion? It. was a beautiful prospect . War over, reduction in armaments, resumption of trade between the Com- munists and the rest of the world! With that prospect, the indeed. But there were doubters two months ago, and there should be more now. That is the dpinion Dana Adams Schmidt, New York Times correspondent now stationed in Paris after two years in Czhechoslovakia, expressed in an article in a recent New York Times Magazine. “Coexistence—A Lesson from History” is his title and he sees the fate of Czechoslovakia standing as a | warning to the western nations when the Communists speak of peace. Coexistence sounded fine to the Czechs. the principle behind the “national front” regimes with | which the satellite countries began the period: “The Communist party pretended to be a party like any other, willing to abide by and let live,” Mr. Schmidt points out. to be equal rights for all parties in nationalized enterprises and private nomic life, for Eastern and Western tural life,” he explains. But it didn’t work in spite of t of the democratic Czechs. “Czechoslovakia, then, is a case promises, a War knows whereof he speaks. His warning is the same as that Dewey in Juneau Friday. The free world must remain free. ~It must accept no false offers of truce. It must |faith than we do who rise vertically many miles | recognize the fact that “coexistence” would lead only | into the air to find out what réally goes on Up| a to a fate similar to that of Czechoslovakia . . doubter anfortarately; —based from_the beginning on the fallacious assumption of Communist goodwill, according to Mr. Schmidt who Im the remaining free world who listen to the soothing A strong free world, able to defend itself, x‘(‘nd_\} to fight together, if necessary, may indeed make it | possible to “win World War IIT without fighting it,” | as Mr. Dewey said the other day. TELL RIGHT FROM WROM Schmidt reminds us, “There were | many good idealists among the Czechs who fell for | prestdent | this line, and there were fools—just as there are | on the international of good will and peaceful inten- Cleveland Press) e who think science and the as- 20th i. it as we turned into the philosophy of 1 Thereof, induced by . . . he hose job it is to examine our na- do not agree among themselves ugh, they do agrec. happened to us as a people— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 20 YEARS AGO vf}‘i.’i"impmm | AUGUST 28, 1931 AOCoa o Miss Mildred Arnold and Mr. J. Marlin Norris were married August . e 26 at'4:30 p. m. in the parsonage of the Lutheran Resurrection Church. W. J. Leivers ® The ceremony, witnessed by a few friends. was performed by the Rev. . Glenn Allen ® prling K. Olafsen. The bride is a popular young woman of Juneau, el John C. Martinsen ® having resided her since 1928. Mr. Norris is equally well known and is . George Phillips . i b s ihh o a projectionist at the Capitol Theatre. . E. E. Smith ° T e ° Cyril O. Hansen . Mrs. Elmer A. Friend and Miss Miriam McBride returned to Juneau |o Gene Vuille e on the steamer Queen this morning. They went to Skagway to meet @ ® o o o o o o & o o Cplector of Customs J. C. McBride and Mrs. McBride who were return- ing from a trip to the Interior and Westward. Lillian Miller entered St. Ann's Hospital yesterday afternoon for medical treatment. B il Alaska pol nls F. A. J. Gallwas, Louis Delebecque and Capt. McDougal left yester- day on the boat Mary Ann‘for a week’s bunting trip. Weather conditions and tempera- | tures at various Alaska points also ¢ = ¥ . on the Pacific Toast, at 4:30 pm., Miss Impi Aalto, of Douglas, who has been attending normal school 120th Meridian Time, and released ' Bellingham, Wash., for the past couple of months, is a passenger by the Weather Bureau are as O One of the steamers due to leave Seattle for Juneau this weekend. follows: Anchorage 56—Cloudy Bound for Petersburg, the following passengers left Juneau this morn- ve g8 i ast half-century. t S - Cles 1951 Welive ”‘_‘L"‘fd "[‘:;h ‘:l ,‘:h"' Nt - ;;‘;“}:‘? Island 4557 C,C“l” ing on the Admiral Rogers: Joyce Wilson, George Blake, Joe Hassen, e Rve lovs UM SN 0 5 g 45—Cloudy | p * passen, Rosalie Lanado, Mary Lanado. Has what we gained been more important than| Bethel 57—Cloudy # & 9 Cordova 51—Cloudy 5 73 what we lost? ‘ : 4 DR a5 Partty *Clow Mrs. H. L. Faulkner and daughter Jean left for Seattle this morn- 1 - Edmonton - 43—Clou ing on the steamer Queen. What s wrong with us? . . . iy selody i) > air we breathe. e things we do.| ==~ g i 5 s stng M “f)ub_":::li Toh‘;_ ers, - Our| Haines 50—Clear| Edward Jahnke, registered guide and well known fox farmer, left e O‘:‘. SR el tvll;,fi.,,;) R ki 4939' " here today on the mail boat Pacific for Pybus Bay where he will meet o Gl i e #3—Clear 4 party of big game hunters. They are aboard the yacht Allawee. onc e PR 4 Oreay of the Campbell-Church fleet, and will hunt on Admiralty and nearby we tix. —Cloudy | °f v | islands. was a skeptic| We have everything. We abound with all of the | M 35—Cloudy | ake us fortable. We arc, on the | Nome —Cloudy U8 TER HUNRs that: MRS LS C‘;m oL yivos o | Northway 55—Cloudy| Weather: High, 55; low, 51; rain, average, rich beyond the rdeams 8! Petersburg 445 00ear od . .. Portland 4 ... 52—Cloudy g We lead in everything—almost. Prince George 38—Partly Cioud; 2 y by Yet . . . something is not there that should be | Seattle 49— Rain D y |_ E gl h —something we once had . . . Sitka 51—Clear | al €s50NS In ENgliSh w. .. corRDON Stalin, like Hitler, thinks we're soft, preoccupied | Whitehorse 48—Cloudy | § o AT Ty Ridio e e | Yakutat 49—Foz . Shenei " H s el WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Leave me sec him.” Say. . . . | o “LET me sec him.” Aze WS{OIF own WoDst N S OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Purlicu (a place of resort). Pronounce Should we It was post-war practices? . . . the rules, to live ‘What corrupts “There were political life. for business in eco- traditions in cul- ‘What is it? he earnest effort | body seems to bel as the father of a ing said: history by which ning today of the i We-try to teaeh & is filled with toda; given by Thomas . to all | There . . . fear what more than what is happening elsewhere? Why has a moral deterioration set in among us to know what to do to meet it. seWhat do T do? among us is happening that brings corruption, loose behavior, dulled prin- our top people? ‘What has taken away the capacity for indignation that used to rise like a mighty wave and engulf the corruptors—the corruptors of public office. of busi- ness, of youth, of sports® No one seems to know. But every- ieve it is upon us. No one seems But everybody worr ten-year-old son, who this morn- I am pconcerned. about my son. ir- ¥ i easy interpretations of what is right and wrong” . . . Maybe the farmer of troubled eyes at the skies upon which he depended so much for providential kindliness. had a greater years ago. looking with The Washingfon * Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) F v to “the party line” regarding friendship balloons. For no satel- lite government dares take a pub- lic stand without first getting its cue from the Kremlin. | ~Czech Flying Saucers Meanwhile, the percentage of “hits”-by operations winds of free- dom must be almost 100 per cent,; : For, instead of sending balloons ; 5,000 miles across the Pacific, we } have been working from just 10| miles_from the Czech border. Thus ?nlmost every balloon is likely to ! hit—though some may overshoot | the mark and come down in Po-| { land. . i} By this time a total of about] . 15,000,000 messages have been irained in on 12,500,000 people in an area somewhat smaller than Virginia and West Virginia com- bined. Most of these messages fall from the sky like rain. They are greleascd from an altitude of 30,- x000 feet when the Dewey and Al- iMy rubber balloons burst. Two ; thousand messages are in each of i these balloons, written on water- | s proof paper, and they scatter| =down in all directions. Incidentally ; it takes two hours for them to de- £ scend. £ The other type of pillow balloon % probably is treating Czechoslovakia §to a siege of flying-saucer heebie- } Jeebies! For they are smaller edi- | gtiuns of the huge plastic pillows ¢ made by General Mills which air- plane pilots have sighted in the| I sky and identified as flying sau-| i cers. It is now no secret that these i flying plastic pillows are part of the N&¥y's experimental work on i the cosguc ray. ~. The “much smaller plastic pil- lows, made by General Mills, which ‘e have been showering over ‘zechoslovakia, have the same i eerie quality as the flying saucers. f They come to earth gradually and * bounce along the ground, the i word “Svboda” or “freedom” being § printed in red letters on the side.| Inside Balloon Story It is now possible to tell some of the inside facts as to how oper- - ation winds of freedom was con- jceived and executed. Chief credit committee, headed by Gen. Luci Clay, put the freedom bell in Be: lin last year and has been doing| an important job of beaming broadcasts into satellite countries from two radio stations in south- ern Germany. Jackson and I first conferred regarding friendship balloons on April 13. Tt was exactly four months later, Aug. 13, that the first bal- loon was launched over Czechos- lovakia. ' During that four months more detailed preparation went into this operation than the Czech Com- munists would ever dream. One meteorologist and two balloon ex- perts were sent to Germany a month in advance. They had to corral hydrogen tanks, trucks, train German launching crews. Ev- ery detail had to be thought out beforehand—from selecting differ- past the balloon-launching con- voy: cards on the Czechs. That's what the Americans did to us the war, and they were such good counterfeits that the Hitler crow got all fouled up.” . .. Lee Lewis, the General Mills balloon exper is one of the few men ever ar rested for coming down in a bal-| pants loon in the U.S.A. His arrest was Prague, with the word 'S',lm(mA! at Sheboygan, Wi where he landed hs big bag ratherythan go' Most people don’t realize out over Lake Michigan. After the! to the ca cops pinched him they apologize(l‘j the winds in the upper altitudes al- and when Lewis couldn’t find hotel room, they let him sleep in jail. . . Lewis says that, when traveling by balloon, there is ab- solutely no noise and you can hear housewives gossiping in their back yards, 2,000 feet below. . Jackson, the human dynamo ciples, subverted morals, easy expediencies, m"")!FOI' odober “You should drep ration|could be completely remade intwo | during | Pe « Dk b of Lo . Furnifure Repair pur-lu, first U as in FUR, second U as in USE, accent first syllable. | OPTEN MISSPELLED: Glutinous (sticky). Gluttonous (sreedy). (lasses S(hfldfl!&d | SYNONYMS: Active, agile, alert, quick. lively, supple, brisk. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Toda; ! Let us | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. word: | ASPIRATIC ardent desire or longing for what is elevated or above A furniture repair and uphol- one. “He ations made her unconscious of what was happenin: stery workshop will be held in|apout her. Juneau in October, it was announ- | jced today by Miss Hallene Price, rwm home demor ation agent forthe ! b University of Alaska. Miss Mary | M 0 D E RN E'l' I 0 U E'I"I'E Y Robinson will supervise the wun:-‘! ROBERTA LEE shop. | Miss Price said that anyone II\-:""' GA2ctn ol s 3 terested in attending classes should Q. When a man and his wife are entertaining a number of guests telephone her at 883, or write to|for dinner, and dinner is announced, do both the host and hostess pre- { her at Box 1109, Junead. She Will{geqe their guests into the dining room? themspecial _instruetions cou- PR e ) he meeling 4] v : i i f ( ’A’l" ;»3:)1 lp m on Aug. 29, Mies| Woman guest, and the hostess goes in last of all 3 x et Q. When a man is escorting a woman and another man offers her Price will give a demonstration in her office in the Red Cross room a seat in a public conveyance or picks up something she has dropped in the Shattuck building, on meth- isn't he sunposed to lift his hat to that man? most ods of measuring chairs and day-| A, If he has any sense of courtesy, he certain does. enports to determine the amounti g 75 it proper to send typewritten letters of condolence? kind of material to complete; 4 N5 More thoughfulness «nd more sympathy are expressed when a face-lifting job. | She stated there would be an| afternoon And DNIgNE’ WOTK DELP| et oot i s s ot s i st e iy and that a chair or davenport| | LOOK and LEARN ¥ ¢ corvox RIS T R e two and one-half weeks, de-| i ALY ling on time spent on it | he committee for Free Europe,| 1. What Vice-President of the U. §. bears the distinction of being s been so steeped in balloonism | the most widely-traveled? letters are written by hand. or [that at Munich he dreamed he| 5 hich adjective would best describe a martinet—sad, gay, strict was hoisted by the seat of his| .. orioo was floating = over =g Uyopin are found at higher altitudes, cirrus or stratus clouds? Freedom” painted on his rear. . .| 4. In what language was the New ‘Testament originally written? due | 5. What is the modern name for the ancient Hellespont? th's turning on its axis,| ANSWERS: 1. Vice-President Alben Barkley. a) ways blow from west to east. 2. Strict. i ’1[ t’s one thing that Stalin, des-| 3 Girrus pite his claimed omnipotence, can- dlbeniy not control. That's also why iwe] & Creek 5. The Dardanelles. can casily send balloons over the ron Curtain, but Moscow \\uul(l‘ difficulty sending them back | ent launching sites to take advan- tage of different wind currents, to arranging for fresh hydrogen to be pumped into the tanks every morning. Motive behind this operation is fairly simple. Communist under- cover operations in the U. S. A. have kept us in a recent state of Jitters. Therefore instead of fray- ing our nerves and using up our energies looking under our beds, we should fray Soviet nerves and keep them in a state of jitters by carrying the propaganda war to the other side of the Iron Cur- tain. It has long been the traditional policy of the U. 8. A. to fight our battles on the eénemy’s soil; not on ours. But in the current war of nerves, now one of the most im- portant phases of modern war- fare, we have permitted the enemy to keep the offensive and use our territory as the battle ground. Operation winds of freedom, un- dertaken by private individuals, not government, marks a small start in reversing this. Balloon-Go-Round Three American G. I. students studying in Germany became the expert balloon-launchers: Ross Gra- ham of Niles, Mich., John Hen- ninger of Pine Grove, Pa, and Richard Ives of Binghamton, N. Y. They were studying for their master's degree under the Univer-i sity of Maryland plan when Mary- land U. suspended its plan, and belongs to C. D. Jackson, dynamic executive of Time, Life and For- tune, now on loan to the commit- tee for free Europe. The latter the boys have been trying to live on the German economy to fin- ish their course. . . said a Bavar-| ian cop as he trundled his bicycle \ THE P A Re AMERICAN WAY able Question ——There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! | : fl Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 30. Conceraing < v 31. Color L. Wonden 52. Asiatle . Quantity carnivorous HOW ABoUT e comfier - Government, 31 Q0N A FREEZE ON : prieek Begin 37. Rent T YES? . Medicinal Most severe A H plant Jumbles b e Dlgl e Lok askance Ceromony * Lose luster “ake froster Perseverance ig0 of a roof 6.OW o s nick=- b }?Qfix’lu Lidd Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle s of . Flat-bottomed “lho earth Towboat DOWN 3. Stirred up | 27. Declares g3, Table utensll 1. Devoured 4. Change position | 207 Witnesses 67 Secure 2 Cere ety 6. Complete collection . Scoffed Cuts with & chisel Forelgner . Parcel of Eround . Charge Genus of maples . Pertaining to a surface French capital Obliteral Dried . Backbone Warded of Lingering Avid . Herole poem Church official Device for lifting Crush . Passing fashion 47. Gone by 49, Silkworm 50. Golf mound Howevées SO HEMRE WA, EEEHNEL LEHEE sl MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 142 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. €D B.P.0.ELKS Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- nesdays at 8 P.M. Visiting broth- ers welcome. LE ROY WEST, Exaxlted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Every Friday Governor— LOREN CARD Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN 8 V.F. W. Takua Post No. 5559 Meeting every Thursday in the C.I1.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. NASH SALES and SERVICE CHRISTENSEN BROS. 909 12th Phone Green 279 A | — Brownie's Liquor Store Phone 103 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 2508 R —— NICHOLSON’S WELDING SHOP Tanks and General Welding ALL WORK GUARANTEED P. 0. Box 1529——Feero Bldg. STEVERS® LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter - Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 > Caslers Men's Wear’ McGregor Sportswear Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Skyway Luggage BOTANY "500" CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitier for Men SAJ)IITARY MEAT 13—PHONES—49 Free Deltvery TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1951 J. A. Durgin Company, Inc. Accounting Auditing Tax Work Room 3, Valentine Building JUNEAU, ALASKA P. O. Box 644 Telephone 919 ——e e o o o 0o o o o * o ® EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY o ® o 0o 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists | BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. . Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 Second and Seward Card Beverage Co. Wholesale 805 10th Bt. PIONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O THOMAS HARDWARE dnd FURNITURE CO. PHONE 555 PAINTS o8 Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Remington Typewriters SOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL i| Juneau Motor Co. Foot of Main Street MARE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. | HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 H Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 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 T72 High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Btore GORDON H EMPIRE is invited to be Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "BRIDE FOR SALE" Federal Tax—12¢ 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! . ANDERSON as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA our guest THIS EVENING THEATRE Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 TheB. M. Safety Behrends Bank Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL - SAVINGS . L s . LN apr whs RRSr tarr e e i s

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