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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—-JUNEAU, ALASKA 20 YEARS AGO SEPTEMBER 4, PAGE FOUR MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple - beginning at 7:30 p. m. ‘\' Wm. A. Chipperficld, 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 J. A. Durgin Company, Inc. Accounting Auditing Tax Work Room 3, Valentine Building JUNEAU, ALASKA P, O. Box 644 Telephone 819 e e Daily Alaska Empire Publishied every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY 8econd and Main Streets, Juneau Alaska HELEN TROY MONSEN - - DOROTHY TROY LINGO ARCHIE E. CAMPBELL from THE EMPIRE B SUBRAR - PhT SARY 1931 (Ketchikan News) Prestdent Vice-President Managing Editor Ketchikan residents in particular and Alask in general should give serious thought to the sta ments ms yesterday to t& Ketchikan C! of Commerce by Vic Fisher, Townsite Planner the Bureau of Land Management Fisher mn effect that the Bureau proposed to establish a separate city at Ward Cove for the of the pulp workers. This of ,the government © 0o 0 0 0 0 0 0 o EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY ® © 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter SUBSCRIPTION RAT Delivered by carricr in Juneau and Douglas for § six months, $9.00; one year, $17.50 By mail. postage paid, at the following rates: One vear, in advarce, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; | one month, in advance. $1.50 Subscribers will confer a favor !f they will promptly notify the Business Office of any failure or irrecularity in the delivery of their papers Telepbones: News Office, 602 Southeastern Alaska sportsmen wo‘rc up in arms from Juneau to | Ketch curtailme; duck and geese hunting season to the current month from the w2l three and one-half month period. { the opening day of the season, local hunters invaded the flats from Salmon Creck to Mendenhall. Few, if any hunters came home y-handed. There were bags of various sizes reported from the single and brace to as many as 14, one under the legal daily bag limit. per month; fors| SEPTEMBER 4 Vgt of . us Clyde E. Gordon 3 Daniel R. Steele " y Turner, Jr. t Dalton Olsen Mrs. Frank Dick Earl D, Miller . e o 0 said accommodation mill is socialistic planning on the part on the grandioss scale recently outlined by Secretary of the Interior, Oscar We might be old fashioned in our thinking but can see no difference in this of planning for Alaska and that being carried out in Russia by Joe Stalin and his Fisher said he had béen led to believe that K an was ot capable of plan- ning for the coming of a pulp mill and did not have Rob tness Office, 374. Sig "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRE: The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published : herein apman! ceecoeccece Mr. and Mrs. John E. Pegues bceame the parents of a young journal- ist w n a son was born to them at St. Ann's Hospital Sept. 1. A desk at The Empire is being reserved for him where his father is a member of the staff and his mother worked for séveral years. i ‘Wealiler al AlaskaPoinis | | sort spapers, 1411} NATIONAL REPRESENTATI Yourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, W s [ passenger to Juneau on the Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Muslecal Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 Second and Seward C. Steinbeck, of Dixon, Iowa, was a Princess Louise. He is here to visit his brother, William Steinbe 5. P. Rundich. an employce of the Alaska Juneau mine who } been on a pleasure trip to Washington and Oregon, returned to Ju: on the Princess Louise, the room for the neces expansion needed to take care of the additional population. We here in Ketchikan know this to be absolutely unfounded but the typical of the spuri thinking and the unbalanced logic of the arguments used in favor organized Federal developments as proposed for us by Oscar Chapman Nor is Fisher the first these s Federal schemes—for offhand we can remember Assistant Secretary William Warne and Kenneth Kadow and their fantastic financial plan. Last winter we list- | ened to Joseph Morgan of the Bureau of Reclamation outline the Federal Swan I which would put the government the power in the area and thereby cont All of these scheme: re wrapped in the same at- tractve dressing of “giving you something for noth- V. F. W Takn Post Ho. 5559 g every Thursday in the C.LO. Hall at 8:00 p.m. Weather conditions tures at various Alaska points also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 p.m 120th Meridian Time, and released. | by the Weather Bureau are as| { follows: Anchorage Annette Island remark is nd tempera- false and s of —_— Junz‘:'m-\'m:ng Hardware Company was advertising Super X and Remington shotgun shells at the following prices: 12 gauge, $1.15 per box; 16 gauge, 95¢ per box and 20 gauge, 85¢ per box. Card Beverage Co. to reveal Wholesale 805 10th Bt. 52—Fog | 48—Fog 33—Drizzie | Cntracts aggregating sligh less than $20,000 have been awa 1 for the constructon of the new government school building at Hoonah it was announced today by architect Lester Troast of the Office of Indi Aff R. J. Sommers Construction Company was the cessful bidder for erecting the huilding and Rice and Ahlers Comp given the contract for talling heating and plumbing equipme PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Tuesday, Septcmber 4, 1951 NASH SALES and SERVICE CHRISTENSEN BROS. 909 12th Phone Green 279 MLt development plan on to control SCHOOL BEGINS The @pening today of Juneau’s schools, important as it isito the pupils, teachers and citizens of the | community, constitutes but a small part of the tremendous procession of children advancing another step towards the completion of their education. In the democratic world there is a general recogni- tion of the right of every child to an education. The governments of the several states and Territories under the American flag have accepted the re- sponsibffity and public schools, supported by puk funds, offer educational opportunities to their children as a matter of unquestioned right. No thinking person can safely ass educational system, its buildings and equipment, its curricula and personnel, is perfect. But when we dwell @b minor faults let us not overlook the tre- mendofi values that accrue to our society through the overall program. It -8 certain that the costs of educating our youngsfers will continue to increase in the years shead..” This is inevitable, but when we consider costs and the attendant taxes, let us be mindful of the abundant return from this relatively modest tnvestnient in the future of the nation. An intelligently developed population cannot be} evaluated in terms of dollars and cents — nor can we estimate the ultimate improvement in the upcoming gcncrafi’uns over their predecessors. Of this, however, we may be certain — the value will far exceed the cost. | in p; The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates Cloudy Cloudy was A son was born yesterday morning to Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Goetz o Douglas, at St. Ann’s Hospital. The youngster weighed seven and one-half pounds. 46—Partly Cloudy 42— Cloudy 49—Cloudy . 43—Clear —Rain | Partly Cloudy 43—Fog | , 46—CI 5—Partly Cloudy Juneau Kodiak Kotzebue criticize but | McGrath is too great | NOMe 7 North s philan- | po ing” but we cannot help but feel that private initiative Airport and private industry go out the window as more and more Federal control It is not our our interest in Ketchikan blindly PHONE SINGLE O ——— | Brownie's Liquor Store Phene 103 139 So. Franklin P. 0. Box 2508 THOMAS HARDWARE and FURNITURE CO. PHONE 555 PAINTS - o1Ls Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE nter to constantl and in Al for us to the throphy “Without seeking a motive This much we do know—Countles the United States have tion, and in size, directly in connection with tHe desire p- 52 54- Weather: High, e i e ettt Daily Lessons in English % 1. corbox 55—Cloudy | Cloudy e 56—Rain | NICHOLSON’S WELDING | | SHOP Tanks and General Welding ALL WORK GUARANTEED P. 0. Box 1529——Feero Bldg. low, 43; showers. aceept o or it cities through- | stature, Port Prince in | Seattle | si | sit turn stimu- George out grown in po: Y ume that our | growth of ndustry in their area which in tehorse lated the orderly progress of the community Ketchikan has proven its ability to grow without the aid of Federal development, and it has admittedly u;;iied Air Lines grown in a better and more permanent ner than any of the government colon: Already . H Fathers are laying plans for taking care of the : Official to Arrive mill pruhlomf. M‘»\n_\' of our local merchants Visiting Alaska to re-acquaing improved their business places in anticipation of the| o igents with plane schedules coming development. | which bring cities throughout the We see no need for the government to step in|sStates many hours closer, G. War- and create a new city at Ward Cove at tremendous , assistant district sales expense to the taxpayer and we feel that such United Air Lines in move could only hinder and retard the orderly growth tle, will arrive in Juneau Sept. of our own city which is found upon the princip of private initiative and development which made this | country great. ‘ Remington Typewriters BOLD and SERVICED by J. B. Burford Co. “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers™ FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OIL Junean Motor Co. Foot of Main Street akutat ‘Phone,” the shortened form of , and may be uscd as WORDS OFTEN MISUSEL “tele- phone,” is acceptable in infor or a verb. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: ARM. I inK OFTEN MISSPELLEI SYNONYMS: W cholarshi wi al usag a nou Archive. Pronounce ar-kiv, A" a: s, our : Avoirdupois; six vowels, OI twice. knowle learning, erudition, perception, | STEVENS® m, sc a word three times and it is yours.” Let us| incr y mastering one word each day.- Today’s word: | CYNI ; dishelieving in the sincerity of human motives. “Why & LAD]ES’_M'$SES' | READY-TO-WEAR she take such a cynical vew of life?” { Near Third by MODERN ETIQUETTE ¥operTa R {I| The Charles W. Carter IEL Ll e SR U ey bl Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 RD STUDY: se our vocabulary would Seward Street who makes the territor: Averill, trip into | fir an annua. will about h hedules, whict : { MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES , DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily babit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. HOME GROCERY Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 | com, winter | offer air passengers from I cellent connections at Mainl flights_to Or o the midwest, edst and | renouncing them and we are ask- | ing no guarantees in return. You| w s mwn e S@Fe RO fregudo deprive 150,000,090, 8\ L ) Americans of the freedoms for {rom Sitka | which their forefathers fought so SITKA — (Special) — Sitka I | dearly. You are frée to destroy their places of worship; to hurl planned a public luncheon for Gov Thomas Dewey to be given at the | | them into slave labor camps and | prisons, and to kill as many of | Lutheran Service Center. So many | people wanted to attend thet the them as you wish. Moreover, you | luncheon was transferred to the are now free to take away the liberty of all the peoples the | Moose Hall where several hundred can be taken care of. world, not only in this generation, Then Tuesday evening but forever.” wire from Governor Grueni Q to greet each other in church before the ice ha A peo; begun Ordinarily in church, if a friend happens to catch your 7. And_ there shou SUPpos The Washington Merry-Go-Roun (Continued from Page One) No. | olulu, While | call on | tion repres Ju Av e efficials, tr and in civic ntatives be no murmur or babel of voices in church prior to the service. Q. When a man is seated in a public dining room or restaurant, | nd itance bows to him, how does he respond? ; makes the gesture by getting up halfway from his me time bowing. Then he sits down again. y for a hostess to provide new cards for her guest: Caslers Men's Wear McGregor Sportswear Stetson and Mallory Hats Arrow Shirts and Underwear Allen Edmonds Shoes Bkyway Luggage BOTANY “500" are apparently honest, patriotic, s thinking Americans who fear Wwe D! are not"justified in trying to main- tain and increase our world lead- ership in the field of atomic en- ergy. I don’t know how many people in the United States share the views of this lady. I hope there| are not many, for they are just s it nec at a bridge party? A. Yes. She may use old ones only if they are spotiess and shiny. To Banish “Blue Monday” such a thing would be To give you more freedom and most un-Christ-| To me, unthinkable, ployment. exactly the views the men in the Kremlin are asking the world to believe about us, and Wwhich they would dearly like to have us be- gin to believe about ourselves. To hold the belief, even for a moment, that the Soviet leaders are in the atomic bomb business just bétause we are, is one of the worst possible mistakes we could make. These men do not do things because we have done something first to stimulate them. They do things because they believe their own interests are best served by doing them, and they do them as part of their master plan to ach- jeve domination of the world. We did nothing to force them to take over Czechoslovakia. We did noth- ing to force them to send the North Koreans to invade South| “Korea. And we have done nothing to forcé them.to block almost ev- ery single effort in the United Na-| tions to bring peace to the world —including the American-suppor- ted U. N. plan to place atomic energy under effective internation- al control. Even if we did not have a single atomic bomb, I am convinced that | the Soviet leaders would be just as hard at work building atomic| bombs of their owy, and—if they knew we had none—there would | be a much better chance than now exists that they would use such weapons against us. Our ever-grow- ing stockpile of atomic weapons, far from being a stimulant to war is actually the most importan single safeguard against World War IIL Our bombs are for defense—of ourselves and our Allies They are not for the purpose of making ag- gressive war against anyone. We used the atomic bomb against the Japanese not to destroy lives, but to save lives—the lives of the hun- dreds of thousands of Americans and Japanese that inevitably would have been lost if World War IL had continued 1 believe our national atomic energy policy is the only policy that this nation——upon whose po- siion in the world the lives of millions upon millions of people dépend—could follow and still be copsistent with the Christian ideals and principles we try to live by The American government could, off course, go to the men in the Kfemlin and say: “You have threatened us, so here are our atomic weapons; we are ianlike. It¢ is war that is bad—not atomic war. And it is the w: omic bombs are used that —not the bombs themselves. bombs are to protect liberty to prevent war until that just at- bad Our and day, | which I sincerely hope will arrive, | when the Soviet leaders provide some real evidence that they hon- estly want peace. And if war does come through Communist aggres- sion they are the best means we have of saving the lives and lib- erties of those who would other- wise become Communism’s inno- cent victims. We test atomic weapons becaus® we must test them in our develop- ment program. We do not test them to scare anyene. They are actually evidences of the progress we are making, not only in wea- pons, but also in the manufacture of materials for peaceful use. We must remember that these mater- ials we are now putting into weap- ons can, if never used as weapons, be easily converted for use in the | production of power and the man- substances health radioactive of man’s ufacture of for the benefit and welfare. Atomic energy holds tremendous promise for a better life for all of us in the future, and we are ad- vancing steadily toward greater re- alization of this promise. It is pe- culiarly fortunate, in my view, that atomic energy is also simul- taneously providing the means by which we can preserve our lives, our freedom and our way of life until this promise is fulfilled. My father, incidentally, was not only a great “sermonizer”; he was also a veteran of the Spanish Am- erican War and World War I, and is buried in Arlington cemetery. He knew that aggressors are not de- terred by weakness, and—as he did—TI sincerely hope that, through strength, we may have fewer new graves there in the future. HOME MADE FOOD SALE Home made jam, jelly and baked goods by Auke Bay American Le- gion Auxiliary, Friday, Sept. 7 at 10 am. Sea 903-3t i L LSRR JUNEAU WOMAN'S CLUB Regular meeting at Electric Light Company penthouse Wednesday, Sept. 5, at 1:30. Mrs. C. V. Rudolph, Sec. 902-2t i — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — ing that Dewey couldn't make Even the most loyal Democrats snorted over that one Several parties have already been goat hunting without success. Not that plenty of goats aren’t being seen. Too far back and too much fog. Cut-throat fishing has been so| spectacular the past two weeks that | the trout have been brought to town ; by the gunnysackful, and distributed | from house to house. And the fish- ermen are bored stiff — too easy. ‘ | Mrs. Clyde Maycock was honor | guest at a surprise stork &]m\\'cr! given by the staff of the SJ Com- | munity hospital where she has been | nursing for the past two years. The | affair was also a farewell party as| the Maycocks have been transfer- | red to Juneau. Maycock is connected | with the Forest Service. | Marriage license application made August 22: Glynn Freeland and Lena T. Mitchell, both of Sitka. A daughter, Suzie Ellen, wei six pounds, was born to Mrs. Walter Kgak at the Mt. Edgecumbe i torium. Mrs. Kgak is a patient fr Point Barrow where her ht and two other children await return. Mr. and Mrs. William Coddington arrived for a visit with their and daughter-in- e d Mrs Fred Coddington, at their Mt. Edge- cumbe home. Dr. Coddington is thoracic surgeon at the Mt. Edze- cumbe Sanatorium. Houseguests at the home of Mr and Mrs. Clyde Hager are his sister and niece, Mrs. Dorothy Redfern and Mrs. Ivan Franzen of Evere Washington, and his cousin, Mr Grace Neckerman from Pen vania, Dr. Edward Mehne, arrived weekend, with his wife and ¢ to join the medical staff of the Edgecumbe hospital. Dr. Mehn with the Public Health Service Lydia Ann Tilson left Sitl: spending the sun mother, Mrs. Lydi Tilson graduated this sp: WSC and will teach in fi land, Ore., scheols this spri last Mrs, William Richard returned | Street on Monday Sept. 3, r Rut i Veatch, !0ld age. While in his prime Nosay For ma has mula of positions excepted petitive examination. The app tion of the formula has depr employees from being el- ible to transfer to a regular civil| position in any of the| the District of Colum- | rvice States or bia. NOTICE Dorothy Roff’s Dancing will be in the Parish Hall Classes | on 5th| and on | the following Saturdays. Classes now enrolling in Baton-tap; Toe-ballet; Boys Acrobatic roup, Teen-age | Ballet Class; Teen-age Social Danc- ing Club. Phone BElue 163. 902-Tt! on the Denali with her two chil ren after spending a year in States for her health. Mr. and M Stuart Niche Sr., left by plane this week fo; home in Mont after sp the summer here visiting daughter, Mrs. Tom Brown. Mrs. Joe Deisher and son, Joe Jr., left this week for Wrangell to join Dr. Deisk aff Mt, Edgecumbe Orthor Dr. Deisher is spending weeks checking students at W 11 Institute. Loretta Ott who spent the mer visiting her father liam Ott, manage >, left Satu where she will be here Cordelia Cust eral weeks visiting her M and nd | John , Who spent father N her home in San Francisco. Five candida wers into the Masonic Lodge: J. Rim RBe: Visiting officers from Nile Temy in Seattle who conduc menv of initiation Bracken, Jr., Glenn ben E. Lovegren and Sunday Sitka’s most Die was flown to Seattle for his h: and dental work. cUts, by LOOK and LEARN L 2. Which is covered more thickly with ice, the Pole? Among ordinary foodstuffs, what is the ra What the popular name for the constellation, What is a mulley cow? ANSWERS: English. South. Pole. Vitamin D. Big Dipper. Oné that has been dehorned. A. C. GORDO What language is reputed to have the largest vocabulary? North or South st vitamin? Ursa Major? There is nb subsitute for Newspaper Adverlising! ACROSS L Nervous twitching 4. Eternities . Pace . Top card . Side . Born 2. Warbling . English school . American humorist Thin narrow . Transmit . Small singing irds . Struck a baseball Cavity . Dress the nalls . Flower 8. Jog . Snapping beetle Wedge- shaped DOWN Scotch cap untain in Crete piece Broad smile Bereft Winking 51. American xeneral Solution of Saturday's Puzzle . Placed in the middle . Broad neck scart . Sate . Organ of hearing . Piloting Winced . Sound of & whistle . Other Nobleman Persia Unite Mua Crazy: slang . Body organ . Blinkers Within Rare gas Clan having common ancestry . Run away Landed prop= erty . Silkworm et Dance 8, Vocal solo . Military shele t er Festival Recline 4. Pigtall Plece out CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men SHAFFER'S SANITARY MEAT from work — TRY Alaska Laundry H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys BLACKWELL’S CABINET SHOP FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Free Delivery 117 Main St. Phone 772 High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Store “‘ 0. F. BENECKE as a paid-up subscriber to THE DALY ALASK. 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: "THE PETTY GIRL"” Federal Tax—12¢ Paid by the Theatre Phone 14—YELLOW CAB CO.—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! COMMERCIAL Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Ranking—1951 The B. M. Behrends nk Su'fety Depeosit Boxes for Rent SAVINGS