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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1951 . : . rules arification, or better still, revision of the i I | : Daily Alaska Empire |5 : T MEMORIALS | J. A Durgin Company, Inc. d eliminate much of the present ill-fecling. | troms ction Accounting Auditing Tax Work B, Pl ot iy = 20 YEARS AGO e muprre || ansue and GRANITE | *5i’, vimuis stane OCTOBER 23, 1931 PAGE FOUR rules 2 Barge owners and mining, log 4 operators contend that the regulations requi spection of vessels after beaching virtua elimir es for the transport of heavy machin- and supplies. Operating isolated wo 2 1d con: Publ b in- fuin Streets, Juneau Alaska - s JUNEAU MARBLE WORKS JUNEAU, ALASKA Y President tes Phone 426—302 Franklin St. P. O. Box 642 Telephone 919 ident, HELEN TF i saeisnbe the use of ba e BB ery, material 8§ RIPTION 7] g . 4 N Delivered by carricr in Junesu and Douslas for $1.35 per month; | sections not served by regular Ti and withou Lo e facilities for docking and material handling, the barge By mail s paid, at the following rates: ; ; $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.80; [ has been the only practicable means of supply ey In practice, it was pointed out, the barges beached by bringing them in at high tide and per- 1d dry. | & Matter. in The National Geographic Board at a meeting in Washington, D. C,, ave the name, “Mount Stroller White” to a prominent peak on the northwest side of Mendenhall Glacier, miles from Juneau. The late E. J. White, was an able pioneer journalist of Alaska. “Stroller” White came north in the gold rush days of 1898 to serve on the staff of the Skagway News and lived continuously in Alaska and the Yukon Territory til his death in 1930. OCTOBER 23 . . EMPIRE ® o 0 e o 0 0 0 0 o WANT ADS PAY o ® o 0 0 0 0 o pos I JUNEAU DAIRIES { DELICIOUS ICE CREAM » daily habit—ask for i by name ' Juneau Dairies, Inc. € B.P.0.ELKS Meeting Every Wednesday at 8 P.M. Visiting brothers welcome. LeROY WEST, Exalted Ruler. W. H. BIGGS, Secretary. J. S. Drake Dorothy Trving Elizabeth Tucker Mary Rhodes Eber Cameron Mrs. Allen Shattuck R. N. Druxman Robert N. Osterman Jean Tanner e o o o o 3 $1.5 will confer & favor if they will promptly notify e of any failure or frregularity in the delivery are the ness Of of thef Telephone papers mitting the receding tide to leave them high argo is unloaded and the barge refloated at high tide. This method virtually eliminates damage | to the bottoms and there are no known cases of lost vessels or cargo resulting from beaching. Testimony of operators pointed up the expense and hardship | o | attendant upon dry-dock inspection following each | News Offic Business Office, 374, Then the ¢ "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. TATED PRESS ively entitled to the use for news dispatches credited to it or not other- s paper and also the local news published OF MEMBER ted Pres Private First Class Alex Sokoloff was visiting his parents here. He was a chief radio operator from Spokane. dited in th ~ Alaska Newspapers, 1411 o o . Seattle, Wash. Al k p kd ' Comapny at Mayo, Y. T,, left Juneau to return to Mayo. ' as a o'“ s Ralph Martin was elected post commander of the Alford John Bradford Post No. 4, American Legion. Others clected to office in- cluded: Royal M. Shepard, John McCormick, A. B. Clark, E. M. Gotldard, ". B. Setzer, E. M. Polley, Joseph Thibodeau, A. L. Zenger, R. S. Raven and H. G. Nordling. —N ATIONAL F Yourth ka Juneau Gold Mining He had Glenn .C. Oakes, wharfinger for the Ala Company, was an incoming p: nger on the steamship Alaska been vacationing in the States. Moose Lodge No. 700 Regular Meetings Every Friday Governor— LOREN CARD Secretary— WALTER R. HERMANSEN | such operation. It was this regulation that contributed to failure of the Chilkoot Ferry as a commercial opera- tion and forced its owners to turn it over to the| Territory, which now operates it at a substantial loss. | Other major complaint was the classification of | the protected waters of Southeast Alaska as coastal waters. This classification puts the small charter boats and barges under the same regulation as large| y,res at various Alaska points also ocean-going vessels and forces their owners to either | oi the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 p.m incur prohibitive expense in manning and equipping | 120th Meridian Time, an released their craft or discontinue operations. | by the Weather Burcau are as It was explained by Coast Guard representatives| follows at the hearing, that these matters are not for local Anchor: determination, but will have to be acted upon hy‘gi:{;“;;" Coast Guard headquarters in Washington and me‘Cnrdmn Congress. Dawson We hope that ventilation of these problems will | Eamonton bring about an early overhauling of the oppressive | Fairbanks Until such time, outlying operations will | Haines stanstill or continue only at un- | Havre 1 Juneau Airport . . | Annette Isiana o | Kodiak BOOKMAKER GETS AHEAD | Kotzebue ? — - | McGrath Every honest income taxpayer should be interested | Nome in the efforts of the Government to prosecute those | Northway . Petersburg Portland the Livingston Wernecke, superintendent of the Treadwell Yukon Mining Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phoue 206 Second and Seward | Weather conditions and tempera- Taku Post No. 5559 V.F . W Meeting every Thursday in the Jeep Club at 8:00 p.m. Card Beverage Co. ‘Wholesale 805 10th Bt. Tuesday, October 2 Douglas High School students who were placed on the honor roll ... 20—Clear | included: Hilja Reinikka, Stephanie Africh, Enne Kronquist, Elsa Lun- - 27—010011,\'[(1(11‘ Helen Pusich, Wilma Feero, Astrid Loken, William Cashen, Marie 32—Cloudy | pox phyllis Lundell, Arne Kronjuist, Nina Baroumes, Helen Baroumes. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP 3 3, 1951 PROGRESS VS. REGULATIONS 18—Clear 3—Clear . 17—Snow 3—Clear 39—Clear 25—Clear 32—Clear . 38—Rain 32—Clear 17—Clear « 4—Clear o, 26—Cloudy 6—Clear | 3 Daily Lessons in English - % 1. corbox ... 33—Clear | SOV § WORDS5 OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Johnson could not be 48—Rain | swerved in his cour 26—Snow | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Bellicose. E rved FROM his course. Fronounse bel-i-} - 4—Clear | in BELL, I as in IT, O as in NO, accent on first syllable preferred. 47—Cloudy} OFTEN MISSPELLED: Entree; three E's, though pronounced ahn- NASH SALES and SERVICE CHRISTENSEN BROS. 909 12th Phone Green 279 Fresh killed. chickens were selling for 20 cents a pound at the United Food Company. The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates 1 hearing in the Senate chambers yeste , vessel owners and members of Southeast Ala chambers of commerce testified to the har mposed on them by rigid enforcement of Coast and the classification of Southeast s coastal rather than inland resirictions. either remain at a reasonable expense. Weather: High 47; low, 37; partly cloudy. PHONE SINGLE O hip: THOMAS HARDWARE and FURNITURE CO. PHONE 555 PAINTS ons Bullders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Brownie's Liquor Sfore Phone, 103 139 So. Franklin P. 0. Box 2596 . conducted by a visiting Congressional | 1d at the request of Delegate mnlen} will be considered by the House Mer- and Fisheries Committee, according to | who make false returns for the purpose of avoiding Bonner of North Carolina, chairman of | the payment of their share of taxes. 'y s | Prince George ., who presided. An instance of this kind comes to light in | Whitenorse y of Coast Guard regulations with|York, where a man, described as a top bookmaker|gq,te Jopment in this area has long been and racketeer, filed income tax returns, putting his | yagytat the Juneau Chamber of Commerce |gross earnings at $85 a week, although he had a net| —————— and sought hearings that might|worth of $471400 in a statement made to a bank.| bring a revision of some obsolete restrictions|In addition, he owns an estate of 3500 acres, with al Ma“y Sa!mon Eggs and r Until several weeks ago, little progress | house that has forty-four rooms and thirteen baths. | Planted in Test had been made in that direction, but, on the recom- While the Goverpment is proceeding very mber, Governor Gruening | orously against gamblers and criminals and those on | d to do what he could te sure a hearing by | the fringe of criminality, it would be a good thing Using a new method, Department of Fisheries men planted over 25,- | ¢ of Congress. The governor has come thruugh“rur the nation if some plan could be devised to check | et e s L 000 sockeye eggs in Dredge Lake | y and it is hoped that terday's hearing,|up on the income of all taxpayers. Naturally, many | drainage and Duck Lake Saturday | Q. Is it proper for the bride to wear her engagement ring and Coast Guard hearings commencing | honest taxpayers fear an examination of their re- produce much-needed relief. ‘un'n\, recognizing the possibility of error, but realize in an attempt to foster a run of have the bridegroom put the wedding ring above it? | A. No; the engagement ring belongs above the wedding ring. On blame for the situation can be at-|that if every person paid the income taxes due th red salmon in the area. | cessity for the ation now | vernmental | |~ The experimental planting Was her wedding day, a bride either leaves her engagement ring at home |Rocompliined ‘with ‘& two-inch tube | or wears it on her right hand until after the ceremony. of aluminum five feet long. The! o g there any fixed rule as to how two couples should be seated | tube was placed in a pocket dug . heatre? under the gravel and the eggs wash= | 2 theatre? ed down as the pocket filled in. The A. No; although a man should always have the aisle seat — if their seats are next to the aisle. Usually, in the case of two married couples, New as Remington Typewriters SOLD- and SERVICED bdy J. B. Burford Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers”™ SYMONYMS: Enthusiasm, eagerness, vehemence, ardor, fervor. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us i increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | ADVENTITIOUS; accidental; casual. “He gained much from this ad- i ventitious meeting.” i EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY mendation of the Juneau chi — STEVERS® LADIES’—MI3SES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 promi: | P MODERN ETIQUETTE ¥operra rEe FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES — GAS — OlL Juneau Motor Co. Poot of Main Btreet memker hanc follc Wedne | the wed by day While little to the Coast Guard, since they merely enforce Government, there would be little nec 15 set down for them by their hCfld-;SI0.000,UUU.OOO tax increase the Admin and the Congress, there has, nevertheless, says is necessary to meet current g criticism of local interpretation of those | expenses. |ing Washington, will spend a solid | year in Santa Fe, New Mcxicu,'Abalone Too Small where he once ran for the Senate. | h \For Commercial Use quarter been Ihé Washington Merzy-Go-Round {m(‘lhud ordinarily used is digging (Cantinued from Page One) ed. This will not require a state- from him—which it's agreed ment e ce while he is still he cannot 1 mn uniform. ROLL CALL FOR IKE It is expected that those attend- ing the full-dress draft-Eisehhower ting will include the four big of the Republican Party— Duff, Darby of Kansas and Driscoll of New Jers Also expect- ed to attend will be Senator Carl- son of Kansas, Gov. Val Peter- son of Nebraska, Senators Lodge and Saltonstall of Mass, Senator Ives of New York, Gov. Theodore McKeldin of Maryland, Senator and Governor Adams of New re. plan is to gather such an phalanx of progressive Repuk caders that local GOP leaders et on the Eisenhower pandwagon without a definite state- ment from the general. The prob- program in Europe is at a crucial stage when he cannot leave it without undoing months of careful planning. On the | other hand, he feels he cannot DRY LOBBY SCORES The breweries are screaming over | a fast one pulled on them by South | carolina’s fast-working Sen. Olin Johnston. Thanks to Johnston, | temperance organizations now get cheap postal rates—together with a new lease on life in waging the battle of prohibition. For the Senator from South Car- olina, himself a dry, quietly slipped temperance literature alongside re- | ligious, educational and philan- | thropic literature when the Senate |was voting the postal concessions. |No one noticed that temperance literature was in the bill until the Senate-House conferees came across |1t while ironing out differences be- | tween the Senate and House bills. Now the breweries are really | screaming. % REVERSE DISCRIMINATION 1 Sen. Alex Smith, the ex-Princeton | professor who ran out on his Col- | umbia co}league, Dr. Philip Jessup, | had a fit when Senator | almost | Sparkman of Alabama showed him | the record on Dr. Channing Tobias, | | out a pocket, at the bottom of larger That it would not be feasible | to inaugurate commercial abalone|esgs by sprinkling them into the fisheries was the preliminary report | pocket along with gravel. The new issued by two Fish and wildlife | method is quicker, easier, and be- Service scientists who recently com- lieved to be more effective. pleted a two month’s study in the) Craig disf | taken Robert Li the FWS Seattle laboratory, headed | they were planted 12 inches down in the expedition which chartered the|the gravel beneath two feet of Lady Bess, owned by W. E. Walker, | Water. deep sea diver. Walker was employ-| About 13,000 eggs were planted ed to dive for abalone which is|near the inlet of Dredge Lake. found just beyond the lowest tide|Clint Stockley, Fisheries biologist, mark. The abalone gathered for |reported several spent coho salmon study was too small and scattered | still fanning their nests in this over a wide area making it difficult | area. Over 4,000 eggs were planted to use the beds commercially. in Duck Creek in the riffles above t. from A. J. Sprague’s eye- iisson-like tube, and planting the : Six quarts of advanced eggs were | ngstone, biologist from | ing station. To prevent freezing, | | the women are seated next to each other, between the two men. : Q. When a man has taken a girl out to dinner and the theatre, shouald she thank him? A. She should not thank him, but she should tell him how much ‘she ““"‘l enjoyed the evening. | LOOK and LEARN It What countries compose Scandinavia? Which portion of an airplane rises first when it takes off? Which takes the least time to digest — beef, pork or bread? What is the great mountain range of South America? What is wort? ANSWERS: by A. C. GORDON The abalone near Craig is gath- ered by the local people when the tides are lower than minus three feet. FERRY MAKES ROUND TRIP GOOD TIME After 2 six day delay due to high seas on Lynn Canal, the Terri- torial ferry left for Haines and Skagway on Saturday making the ‘the Negro alternate delegate to the | United Nations. The un-American Activities Committee had a record return trip here Sunday after- noon. / the first large dredge pond. Over 8,000 were planted near the outlet of Dredge Lake where, Stockley says, cohoes were still actively spawning. Fisheries men say the egg plant- ing is showing itself to be more than the planting of fingerlings in salmon experiments. | They say while only a percentage of the egg: more [ish get i stage than if a planting of finger- lings is made. They say that fish hatched in a natural stream seem There were 10 passengers and 11 to yic Carl Jensen and Lavrik Nielsen of | hatch, of those hatching | Fairbanks are staying at the Bara- | Heath of Seattle are registered at| the fingerling | nof Hotel. Glenn McMillan and son, of Yak- Swden, Norway, Denmark and Ic:land. Its tail. Beef. The Andes. The solution of malt and other substances which is fermented FiOM FAIRBANKS FROM YAKUTAT R. C. FROM SEATTLE W. L. Hockinson and J. Ray the Baranof Hotel. rROM PORTLAND Sheldon of Portland, Ore., cars aboard the vessel on the re- to become better acclimated and | utat, are guests at the Gastineau. |is 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 Outfitter for Men BHAFFER’ SANITARY MEAT FOR BETTER MEATS 13—PHONES—49 Free Delivery HOME GROCERY | Phones 146 and 342 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — FPhone 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 8t. Phone 773 High Quality Cabinet Work for Home, Office or Stere on Tobias far worse than Jessup's, ! a guest at the Baranof Hotel. turn trip. The ferry is scheduled to[to be able to escape their natural| — 4 make a public statement of poliucal‘ intentions without taking off the| uniform and retiring from the army. However, a solid front of powerful anti-Taft Republican leaders would enable the organization work to proceed without a personal an-) nouncement. It would also prevent local leaders from getting sewed up, longz in advance, by Taft. Note—Senater Carlson of Kansas, long-time {riend of Ike's, is leav- ing for Paris today. Since the Eis-| enhower movement will have its roots in Kansas,"Carlson will prob- ably manage its midwest phases. Duff of Pennsylvania, who is likely to handle the eastern campaign, will 1ly is later this month or early in November. to P PAT HURLEY PREDICTS handsome Pat Hurley, Secretary of War, was jons at a dinner party about who will win Ebuilient Hoover’s mak the Briti va ay 15 other affairs of state. “Churchill will win in a walk,” opined Pat, who said he had just come from London. “Flew from three to Dublin where I was the guest of President De Valera. “Our new ambassador to Ire- land,” continued the man who once changed his name from O'Hurley, | “is going to be a flop. I can already feel it in the air. Nice old man, Francis Matthews, but he'’s already | made a speech the Irish don't like. “Saw Ike in Paris,” Pat rumbled | on. “MacArthur is really going af-| ter Ike. That’s one fight I'm not | going to get in between. They're both my friends.” Hurley says he is definitely leav- h clections and how to settle | showing that he had once belonged to nine Communist-front groups. “That’s going to be had for our side i we vote against him,” re- marked Smith, a Republican. “The National Associatic: for the Ad- vancement of Colo:cd People cer- tainly will jump down our throats.” This was the reason why GOP Senators wanted to duck a vote on confirming Tobias. To refuse him confirmatton meant that the party, supposed to be the traditional friend of the Negro, would make enemies. Yet they couldn’t vote for Tobids and against Jessup, since Tobias’ re- cord was far worse. Senator Sparkman, patient chair- |man of the Senate subcommittee, | seemed to enjoy the Republican dis- comfiture. “It seems to me that every mem- ber of the Senate should stand up and be counted on these two men,” |he told colleagues. “You Republi- cans can’t vote for the colored man Iand against the white man unless ;you spurn the un-American Activ- ities committee record.” In the end, two southern Demo- crats— Sparkman and Fulbright— | voted for Tobias, along with GOP Senator Smith. Senator Brewster of Maine, Republican, and Gillette of {Iowa, Democrat, did not vote. The result was that Tobias, a onetime |member of nine Communist-front organizations, got a better vote than Jessup who had ' nowhere near that record. Sometimes it pays to be a member of a minority group. Note—Dr. Tobias_testified that he later withdrew from the nine Com- munist-front organizations. So also did Dr. Jessup, though he didn't have many to withdraw from. leave again on Sunday, October 28.|enemies better than do transplanted The barge will continue to operate ' fish of small size. as long as the Haines Cutoff re- mains open to winter traffic. GETTING KICKED AROUND! ACROSS 1. Pouch 9. Tim| . Vegetable . Mov! Amef author Segment of a Science ot . Cast e bl . Smal dwelling Low nous sound 12, Prot. ralling > 1 | F1 17 71" ] | [22 foilcal town . Perform . Strike and rebound . Menagerie . Title of & ing knight rican as acquainted with . Chop . Farm bullding . Roman tyrant . Assistance . Rock oil . Follow_closely . Coustellation . Surfeited with pleasure . Recline . Nothing . Gluts . Tree DOWN Mineral spring lams o curve off rofitable Il rude monoto- 4. Bugle Kind of wood apanese statesman ective ] 1] HR//d«du7/<d Tl W7/ g NN Wi/ 4 2. Alr: comb, form 3. Distinctive mark %flll=llll N/ dEEEE 7/ [AIRICINEISITIE] WEIERERIE[AIRIE RINTE Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 1. Simpleton 8 Rakt‘:k hl)l' ny things Helical curve 10. Old card gams 11, Affirmative 17. Understood but not expressed Pald publie notice Roughly buflt house: collog. Pertalning to man call o Soft murmur Astounc Point opposite the zenith Fruit of the oak Money paid for use of property Horseback rider's seat Exclamation 3. Steals . City in Iowa 5. Broad open "SINCE YOU Federal Tax—12c DONALD H. PROW as a paid-up subscriber to THE DALY 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: WENT AWAY” 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! Safety COMMERCIAL Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1951 The B.M. Behrends Bank Deposit Boxes for Rent . SAVINGS