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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1951 PAGE FOUR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALAS . ur rer s sigr MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14) [ #ooorrorrrmorsrorrroagss . . l k E . We are encouraged by this trend. Tt is signif EEOON% A SoTETR J. A. Durgin Company, Inc. aily Alaska Empire e oo o e wmion saarwasea vy o] 0 YEARS AGO from g g e D e | rubn.\flia cyery evening except Sunday by the Kremlin line. It appears that the world has learned THE EMPIRE ’|in Scottish Rite Temple Room 3, Valentine Building MPIRE PRINTING CC N to recognize steamroll acy as de-| S : Sccond aaé S Sreet, Juncus Anska ) recognize Soviet ste \mmlmrl(]hplun'ncy (mu hln al. i beglnning at -1‘32 ;l.dm_ JUNEAU, ALASEA HELEN TROY MONSEN ! ¥ - resident | termined to face up to it in the interests of lasting AP " Wm. A. Chipperfield, N - - - Vice-President v P. O. Box 642 Telephone 919 D CAMPBELLC - =~ = Manasing Bastor |peace. SEPTEMBER 11, 1931 Worshipful Master; epl Entered ff“the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class Matter. Moscow’s bully boy has lost great deal of!® . i : A ety ViRIATn e Ay ’ JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. kI AT ground these past few days. His bluff has been|® SEPTEMBER 11 . Mrs. Frank Dufresne and daughter Virginia were due to arrive in PP R N R T Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.75 per month; i i 5 % ° e | Juncau tonight on the Princess Louise after spending several wecks in e EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY o Six months, §9.00; one year, $17.5 called and even his pouting and shouting have failed Aobert. ¢5. Wik i B.P.0.ELKS By mail, postage paid, at the following rates R He i . Robert G. ilms ® | Seattle. . « U ® o o o 0 0 0 0 0 o One year, in advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; to impress the serious-minded delegates. . Mrs. Gene Smith . ot - one month, in advance, $1.50. H We think it takes c g attemnt " g | Meeting Second and Fourth Wed- o d it takes a lot of gall to attempt to|e Mrs. Al Forsythe . Subscribers will confer a favor !f they will pro notify y | nesdays at 8 PM. Visiting brothe the Business Office of any failure or frresularity in the delivery | dictate a peace treaty after having been at war with |® Mrs. C. L. Lovgren ®| Local amateurs gave a short and snappy performance at the South- ¥ p Iz " bR L o A st B, 474 Japan for only five days. But Russia has a lot of |® Stephen G. Noble ® | sast Alaska Fair last night and were warmly applauded. They werc | oS Welcome. The Rexall Store e - gall. And so has Andrei Gromyke o Mr! \I“:"‘} D““‘f’” ® Sparks and Hildre who gave a splendid imitation of Amos 'n’ Andy | LE ROY WEST, Exaxlted Ruler. Your Reliable Pharmacists The Assoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for And we're willing to bet that Andrei catches hell| ® o e ® | 2nd sang two songs. Davis and Berthol took three encores in their song | W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- hell| o K. H. (Bob) Jensen . g g wise credited In this paper and also the local news published ; When he gets back to Moscow emptyhanded. Wonder | o Huntington Gruening o and dance numbers. Four native boys from Douglas headed by Jackson 3 \ BUTLER-MAURO herein. i A N " ____thow much ranting he can get 1y with at thele @ ©« ¢ « © o © o e e Brady played Hawailan melodies on guitars and got a good hand. DRUG CO. " NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Kremlin? 2 HE “onse Lodge “o, 700 Pousth Avenue Bldz., Seattle, Wash t : ; ¢ Regular Meetings Every Friday 22 ‘ Dave Tewkesbury, of The Empire staff, and his son David, arrived Governor— ' & - i STRATOSPHERIC DEBT ea er a | home today on the Princess Louise. The former has been in Seattle the LOREN CARD Alaska Music Snpply v i past three weeks and the latter has been south all summr. Secretary— Arthur M. Uggen, Manager 5 1 el WALTER R. HERMANSEN Planos—Musical Instruments Every newborn American baby of his eyes to | # S .. "SI 10 75 WA VIS ) and Supplies a debt of approximately $1,700 to Federal Gov. i Mrs. W. J. B, MacAuliffe, wife of the doctor at the Government h 208 4 anil e = L2 i { § g P 3 5 R > one Second and Sewa 3 ernment. The total Federal debt is equivalent to an! 3 ’ | Hospital, was a returaing passenger to Juneau on the Princess Louise $11,000 mortgage on every owner-occupied dwelling | :";“”L“‘: (1?:\:”::1!11 n‘m:mt;r;pcarxa(;‘aner two months Outside. V. I'. W. . R | tures at various Alaska s also | = th: Nix']mxlx. i PS o o o that OUr | ) the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 pam., | Taku Post No. 5559 Card Beverage Co. national debt reached the staggering figure of $257,-§ 190th Meridian Time, and released | A communication from Delegate James Wickersham offering his full ¥ &% 5 357,000,000 in the fiscal year 1950 by the Weather Bureau are ascooperation for a bridge across Gastineau Channel was read at the Meeting every Thursday in Wholesale 600 10 2 l It is time to make an honest effort to balance | follows: Douglas Chamber of Commerce meeting. the C.1.O. Hall at 8:00 p.m. FHON® MeLDAY. s NIGHE 1] qur budget. With a national debt of such magnitude | Anchorage 45—Rain, e e i RS or SODA POP : s, September 95 jea oficit spending, is it surprising that|Annette Island 51—Rain | | Mun = Tuesday, September 11, 1951 :‘f“” 3¢ fr“'(’f ot ‘1-]1“ "‘:": L e i R 36 Drisgle| Poultry and fur-bearers are represented by several squads of ducks B mx “I‘)( mf“" l"“'"‘ ;' = “ ‘lu(l‘:l(d“x: 153“ Rethel 42—Partly Cloudy !and a litter of silver-blue foxes at the tenth annual Southeast A]nsknl N A S n YKo bR H -“xu .Imm ‘f”w‘ Phil nn\m;‘\ b o ~|lx' ana | Cordova ... 51—Rain fair. Billy Winn took first prize for a male duck and J. M. Chase LES SERVICE The Alaskan Hotel & x e R to reduce ;“ ;’“l o "0“‘]“""‘ ; ¢ ;‘E“ ":u;; "\} Dawson 47—Rain | for old birds and young birds. Special mention for fox went to W. H. SALES and = s r 16 pRgntisec. 1o RSk Y00 vy gy .| Edmonton 2 39—Clear | Marrott of Juneau. CHRISTENSEN BROS. Newly Renovated Rooms Smigrting with his most decisive diplomatic de- |Ploody peace has alrcady cost mncre than Roosevelt's | Fairbanks 48—Partly Cloudy | FEL b AR 909 12th Phone Green 279 at Reasonable Rates d feat to date, Andrel Gromyko, Soviet Russia’s delegate| War. Having the power (0 ¢o aimes '”.y‘[”“"" o i RAn| pligabeth Cropley and Katfe Smith of Juneau received honorable —_ icse dete Rl to the San Francisco conference, is on his way home. |to tax without limit, the Administration and a major- 7';.\“'“ St .‘;i' i I mention at the Southeast Alaska Fair for sewing exhibits. S et k. For three days, Gromyko and his satellite dele- |ity of Congress is committed to a progiam of “ex- | /nfo AHPOTE 148—Clear ey i e SRR s L B e I""(".\h"“”l,m' e \m L s i o 42_Clear| Helen Rouner, Mr. and Mrs. George Phillips, George H. Phillips,|| Brownie's l|q|jor Store THOMAS HARDWARE treaty’ by means of crippling amendments. He charg-{so dishonest and irresponsible o s \1 McGrath . 42—Rain | Betty Phillips, Virginia Phillips and L. Vasser were passengers on the and FURNITURE CO. ed the United States with “dictatorship” tactics and |BO m oral autherity abroad. Withou ,'\m rican x?xox“ Northway 48—Cloudy | mailboat Estebeth for Chichagof today. Phone 103 139 So. Franklin PHONE 555 asserted that the treaty contained the seed of new \\:u'lh'i\dl‘l‘*hj!: lxtlsmm peace is impossible and continued ,’f“,"?“‘f'“ 317?1:“:- it P. 0. Box 2508 PAINTS omns in the Orient o, L TE T Weather: High, 51; low, 50; generally fair. H d a Shelf i . P re re To correct the evils of h a government the tle 40—Cloudy | | ———— ) Builders’ and S| He offered amendents which would have rendered ; | NACOACE Japan. defenseless and stomped out of the conference people, themselves. must reduce the amount of gpv- “"hl"lll‘ o o Clo;xdy' tor r -enacting Constitutional limitations re- 1018 = { gets when bable to secure a ballot on them. He stormed ernment by re-enacting 3 Ye 53— Rain . % . b { 5 ¥ at theexclusion of Red China from the meeting. !:u\nmn«, the kind of government the people want i Dally Lessons in Engllsh “1; 1. GORDON | NICHOLSOS!;I“S)PWELDING Remington Typewriters And despite all his bluster and bombast, forty-|Without that Congress is defensele ainst the T B N H e SOLD and SERVICED by eight Wations signed the pact in Saturday’s cere-,m(ormmublc organized press that coutinue | Bfl[/ GLAS | & o S e A w:)flx é‘:;“l Welding mony. Ito increase. ! - 5 | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “We intend to stop for a J. B. Bfll’ffll’d 00. 5 i \ NE “/ S | few days in New York.” Say, “REMAIN for a few days.” P. 0. Box 1529—Feero Bldg. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by ."' w h. f = { OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Potentate. Pronounce po-ten-tat, O == Satisfied Customers” e A as Ing on ' H " £ { Sadie Cashen Home |as in NO, E as in TEN, A as in ATE, accent first syllable. — Mrs. Sadie Cashen returned home OFTEN MISSPELLED: Dyeing (coloring). Dying (expiring). ( Cd o | - r a pxtel Va J 2 3 ! with her sons and T 4 R 2 4 WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | 4 (Continued from Page One) = sz g chter. Her dafighter Mrs. Ralph| B bt ; B, RV : y 4 LADIES’'—MISSES’ 1 GREASES — GAS — OIL | s 1 The | $37.44 A i ! ! Mortenson, who now makes her: (Rcréase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: READY-TO-WEAR - gS, Alaska—(Special to The | $37.44 was made and turned over to ( Mortenson, % AT hes TR & -TO- g $'n Pofarwno twohders ‘it fhe GOP E:;;::E‘A Aé;;n;m v';uev Snorta. | tne troasury. On Sept. 8 thore wag | Home at Gig Harbor, Wash., accom- | CATEGORY; classification; division. “Libraries come under the category | s | Juneau Motor Co. really jwants him.” The editorial| o0 "ycc o ion was organized Aug. | @ joint meeting of the Aus !>:\x'\:c§1‘ mg: Cnl:«h.oq‘an@ . return- »f public institutions. eward Street Near Third Ry I was wiltten by Dr. Glen G. EYe 5 officers are President George |the Legion at the home of Mr. and | 118 Via PAA. Mus. Wortensen th- e e of the University of Wisconsin. He |Gy "of 35 Mile, Steve Sheldon, |Mrs. Jack Ward. After the officers | 1€00S 1o Vislt heve Wnt, ber Moo ) " said he wanted to be a Republican, | ;o™ preciqent, of Haines; Mrs.|of the Auxiliary have been installed | Pand completes the trolling season | by The Charles W. Carter but “nothing happened” when he|p,vny johnson of Kluckwan, sec- | the men will adjourn and hold their | 309 #1€Y Wil refury together on ROBERTA LEE JUNEAU DAIRIES i approached known party leaders: oi.,. ang treasurer; Mr. R. John- | first meeting of the fall. The wo- | ‘heir troller the "Totem. | X i ) Morluary 1| DELICIOUS ICE CREAM | with an ‘;fler wufms dflofll'fli? and | o1 of Kluckwan, executive officer.| men will also hold their first meet- | St e b | SPCETIRCT DRSS TR . a daily habit—ask for it by name i - - ontribution. | 6 » restric and | i e meetings have g Mas ] Sakary. Live:doliar & { Membership is to be restricted and|ing. After the meetings have been| ... “OSORS TECRRE L1 o0 Ao i bride and bridegroom supposed to recelve congratula- urth and Franklin Sts. Dr. Eye said this caused him to|ill meet when necessary or upon|adjourned there will be a lunch. All " FC R B0 b Fon | tions of their guests in the church? PHONE 136 / Juneau Dairies Inc wonder—whetherour -party is in-'request. Place and time of future | members of both the Legion andthe |goo 0% o0 o oS o o e ol e Th T 4 i 1 4 . terested only in large contribu-'meetings are undecided. | Auxiliary e asked to reserve this lThIer.e “v';“ R wark m‘ Ry De-‘w A. No; they should not receive any congratulations in the church, tors. He added that Republicans | .y date and plan to attend the meet- e g Ebut should go at once to the place where the breakfast or reception is to caslers Men's weu might win a general election “by| e At | ings. B ibe held. HOME GROCERY accepting a few million of us one-| Marion Brace e iging g w. 's Club Meeti | Q What is the correct position in which a person should hold his} McGregor Sportswear x to-tive-dollar prospects,” but warn- | Costellanoof Evelei e Werel Mr. and Mrs. Emie Lindquist] I‘;‘““;f_ W 4 g "‘; | hend iwhile featisig it the taple? t| Stetson and Mallory Hats Phones 146 and 342 ed that the rising cost of living|united in marriage Aug. 24. The|p.ve yeturned. from a two weel he Douglas Island omen’s | A The b BonTd i i : 5 i 2 Arrow Shirts and Underwear b under ' Democrat administrations | Wedding took place in the apartment | o oo 40 the ‘westward. Club will hold their first fall meet-| A e head s e held in an erect position, without appearing Allen Edmonds Shoes Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 would soon make it difficult rm.“thal was to be the couple’s home in it ing Wednesday evening at l}?P heme |stiff. The ‘body can lean forward slightly, but the head should never be Skyway Luggage American Meat — Phone 38 him to contribute even one dollar | Port Chilkoot. The couple was The junior choir of the Presby of its president, Mrs. Edwin C.|bent at a right angle. i i |attended by Mr. and Mrs. Gene b * | Johnson, with Mrs. Val Poor as co- s 1t pr is ved: invitand Some of the letters on this edi- a y e 3 i | terian church will soon begin thei X ek e o Q. Is it proper to issue engraved invitations to a cocktail party? torial reported experiences similal”ig;:‘[:"]‘xgs_:s:: ;;';‘i T:m};;(\l’el).\ (I\I? weekly practices and sing on alter q:fé cm s ““(:(:l"m“:‘h :ol:}m:;“(’?e‘ A. Only on strictly formal occasions. Generally, these invitations B 0 T A N Y To Banish “Blue Monday” fifi;;fi?fl%fii' ag”fli;;:;i:fifi &r*: | Prada is with the ACS. | nate Sundays. not knowing Mrs, Johnson’s address| 21¢ €xtended over the telephone or by personal contact. ,,500,, To give you more freedom fleotion upon tens of thousands of | — | Mr. and Mrs. Bob Williams fert | J et A e G 40 L0 O | e e | from work — TRY diligent, industrious Republican| Tom Williams and Susie Hepler | Haines Aug. 27. Williams will enter ;i e L H b c L o T n E s '1, workers throughout the country, | were married by U.S. Commissioner | the Louisville Presbyterian seminary | nyyan REPORTED I_ 0 OK a n d L E A R N Y Aluka La“dry 1 and suggested that if Dr. Eye re- |Ross L. Hevel Aug. 30. They were|in Louisville, Ky. BT oy make A. C. GORDON NUNN-BUSH SHOES ally wanted to be a Repubhcan,;nlwnded by Mr. and Mrs. Charles - i " > g: L ¢ STETSON HATS he could easily have found a way.|Hepler, Jr. Mrs. Elsie Mellotte will be ir | Disappearance of a Kake man GRAVES The magazine declined to publish | — charge of the sermon Sept. 9 in the | was reported today to the office of 1. Are US. Congressmen required by law to attend any session Quality Work Clothing H s an editorial* prepared to correct| Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Carswell| Presbyterian church. Acting U. S. Marshal Walter Hel-|of Congress? The Clothing Man some of Dr. Eye’s impressions. |made a flying trip into Haines the — lan by Deputy Marshal Ralph 2. Which is more brittle, cast iron or wrought iron? Well, Dr. Eye has been asked to|past week from the border. Father Gallant returned from his | Smith of Petersburg. 1 .3 What oountry fies Seilisoile 4n warlared rlgn nmmu LEVIS OVERALLS go to work. His neighbor, Edwin | * vacation by way of Haines. He ar | The man, Smith reported, Was| 4 what are the feminine names of each of th bl pe Complete Outfitter for Men for Boys 0. Bosten, is the new Dane Coun-| The Sheldon Serenaders held afrived With Father Mosey, who mei | Henry Adams who flew from Kake| E 3 ofsihigee animms 3= ty' (Wis) Republican chairman.|dance in the school gym Aug. 25.|him in Whitehorse on the BYN bus | to Petersburg on Sept. 4 or 5 andy2Ulb (b deer, () sheep, (1) gander. (¢) fox, () ram? ., SHAFFER'S He has invited Dr. Eye to take It was well attended and the music | Father Gallant reports a very nicc | has not been seen since. 5. Which contains redder blood, a vein or an artery? BLACKWELL’S charge of their precinct, and mfi]\v«w good. The PTA served the|trip, but is glad that he is back in | Hellan said the missing man has ANSWERS: SANI'I'AIIY HEAT CABINET SHOP r i F hi r that | lunch. Alaska. ree childr v eing cared | minded” him in an open letter (ln.!} W ai - three children who are being L«llEfi 1. No. FOR BETTER MEATS 117 Main St. Phone T72 [ “our Rane County Republican or- : e Ty for by Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Emil 2. Cast wron. v ? ganization Is financed principally| The American Legion held a rum-| Miss Lillian Turner, little girl' |at Treadwell. 3. England 13—PHONES—49 High Quality Cabinet Work by the $1 contributions of a stead- |mage and food sale Aug. 27 in the supervisor at Haines House has re- |- Hellan 'is conducting an invest-/ Free Delivery for Home, Office or Stere 7 ily mgubting number of your fel- | basement ~of the Presbyterian | turned from her month vacation. | igation. L &) Oow, () doe, (c) ewe td) dilgky.(e) Yixen, D), e¥e: Hot doughnuts were made 5. Artery. & Jow citizens—men and women m |church all walks of life who share your | on the spot and sold. A net of convietion that our nation must| e returnzsto sound moral, economicin correcting that situation. We and pelitical principles country and our American way of life is to survive.” I hoge and anticipate that as a new Republican worker, Dr. Eye will begeffective. ~We need and welcom{ all the eyes—Mr., Mrs. or Miss—that we can enroll in the coming eampaign. It doesn't make any difference whether they have been inactive Republicans, Dem- ocrats or Independents. We need their services and we need their contrbuttons—from one dollar to the $5,000 permitted by the Hatch “ Act. Our records show that last year, 75 per cent of the contributions to the National Committee ranged from $1 to $99. In Massachusetts for example, the Republican party raised $525,000 from 35,505 contri- butors, or an average of $14.80 per contributor. The Democrats, in contributors, or an average /_)I $410 per contributor. That indi- cates pretty well which party gets she large contributions, despite %he falsehoods persistently circu- fated by the Trumancrats : But even more urgently than ontributions, large and small, we doorbell ringers. Elections are scver won by strategists in ivory wers, but by the pavement-pound- ng efforts of volunteer workers. ; survey when I became chairman Ewo years ago showed that 37,000 f our precincts, or 20 per cent { the total, were unmanned by epublican workers, Through our hools of politics and field ac- ‘tvities, we have had some success| course. if our hope to put i the vast contrast raised $572,000 from 1,395] into the next cam- paign the hardest-hitting Repub- lican organization of all time. Tc do it, we need the help of every- |one who believes the time is past | due to have an honest, efficient ,and competent national administ- ration. In New England, for example, one state Republican organization has a goal of 50,000 workers to call on 10 families each. In the middle west, a state Republican chairman has been instilling new blood into his organization, and of 43 new county chairmen, 35 are under 40 years of age. The results were ap- parent last fall when 22 of these counties turned out heavier Re- publican votes than in the 1948 presidential election. In criss-crossing many times, I have found that majority of Republican officers at all levels—local, state and national—are sincere, consci- entious and hard-working. of course there are exceptions, and Dr. Eye may have encountered some. Any party organization which met five successive defeats in national elections is bound to have some rust on the machinery which needs chipping off. That is our purpose and our de- termination. This is the year we are building the Republican party, as one of inclusion rather than ex- clusion, as one which welcomes recruits whatever their previous political allegiance. The times are too critical, and the stakes too the country great in 1952, to permit any other “THE AMER WAY ICAN gThere is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! | iC d P rossword Puzzle ACROSS 30. Domesticates L Worm 31. By p 4. Disable 82, Sanctloned & 8. Chess plece 84 Team of b 12, Moceasin horses i 13. Fale brown 5. Rodents 14. Money pre- 36. Incline mium 37. Mexican shawl 15. ‘Worshiper of 40, Mineral 1dols springs 17. Cotton fabrio 41. Fish sauce 13. Children 42. Birth {14 19" Young girl 46. Old English | i 21. Mare coln 1% i Bolimung to 4% Fodal dixte ‘1 24. Pertaining to 43. Peda S (o) 49. Matron 1 "] Solution of Saturday's Puzzle 25. Predeter- 50 Greek town- min v _ ship DOWN 2. Unhappy 9. 2000 pounds 1. Perlod of time 1.'Slender finlal | g o, ne of the British Isles a discontent Inclosure ola Liquor L Mid-day Loiter FITTPIT AdEEN S Wise declsion Balkan in- habitant bone Il//.//jl EHHERH T. D. HOCKMAN 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: "A LIFE OF HER OWN" 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! Oldest Bank in Alaska / 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The B.M.Behrends ‘Bank Safety Depeosit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL SAVINGS ' P G 015 45 KAl BRI 9 B s |