The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 12, 1946, Page 8

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ENTIRE JUNEAU |12 DEADIN CRASH GOLD BELT WILL BE RE-EXAMINED Two Geologists Arrive an amy 5-20 Supertortress on a Here fo Commence | B i - to Chicako, erash- Extensive Survey ed today in the Great oKy Mountains National Park, near the Here to commence a complete geologic study of the entire Juneau ‘Tennessee-North Carolina line, kill- ing all 12 men aboard The crash occurred at Collins Gold Belt, the first in some de- Gap, about a mile east of Cling- cad are two Geologists of the man’s Dome, a 6,643-fcot peak, U. S. Geological Survey: W. S. Park headquarters reported At Twenhofel and Francis A. Stejer, noon nine bodies had been remov- who have just arrived from Wash- ed from the wreckage. ington, D. C - S g R Here awaiting them for the past Topogra 1 Engineer for the Geologic: Survey, who will work independently in conjunction with( BY HIGH COURT'S Tyvenhofel and Stejer on a new topographic map of the Juneau MEMBERSS(ORE area. Local helpers will be employ- ed by both sections of the party — WASHINGTON, June 12—Sena- o accomplish their tremendous as- tor Bridges (R-NH), citing a speech “Twenhofel revealed that he and,by Justice Hugo Black Lefore a Stejer expect to get going on their | gathering of the Political Action examinations in about | Committee, said today a Supreme while Seelig already is|Court Justice should leave the set to begin his task. Hardly morebench if he “desires to make poli- than a art can be made on the|tical speeches.” geologic survey this summer, Twen- “I mean resign,” Bridges told the hofel advised, as the region to be Senate. The Black speech to which Bridges referred was delivered April 12 te-! fore the National Citizens Political |Action Committee Roosevelt Mem- examined is huge, extending from Sumdum to Berner's Bay. More than one summer also will be re- quired to complete Scelig's mapping jok orial dinner, at the Hotel Commo- Twenhofel indicated that hisidore, New York. group 1 likely commence itsi The speech was reprinted in the task in tF immediate vicinity of! Congressional Record at the re- Juneau, where the most extensive'quest of Senator Guffey, (D-Pa). mine workings exist and there are| —— - greater surface showings. The ex-‘ | oo ade worn on the, STEAMER MOVEMENTS | ground and underground | A geological re-examination ofl prejghter Victoria, from Seattle, the Juneau Gold Belt has long been’ gue anytime after 4 o'clock this a goal of the Juneau Chamber of geternoon. Commerce and of others interested| ajaska and North Sea scheduled in mining development hetabouts. y, cai] from Seattle Friday Acttial commencement of work UP- princess Loui heduled to sail on it this summer will be a con-!g. 0. vancouver Saturday 9 p.m sumation of efforts reaching back' — pyincess North scheduled to ar- over several years Irive from Skagway at 7 a.mn. Fri- T day and sails south at 8:30 am. FROM POLARIS TAKU | Freighter Square Sennet, from Mrs. W. F. Galloway and child- | Seattle, due Sunday. ren have arrived here from Polaris | o -G Taku. They are staying at the Bar-| LISTEN to Mrs. Elton Engstrom, anof. Republican Candidate for the AR SO | House over KINY Monday, 7 pm. (295-15) Empire Want Aas bring resuits! SOCIAL SECURITY Conspired Against OF ARMYB-290N TAX INCREASE IS FrancoRegime;Seven TRAINING FLIGHT PROPOSED BY (OM.iAre Sent lo Prison WASHINGTON, June 12. — The| MADRID, June 12.—Seven Span- House Ways and Means Commit- iards will spend the next four to tee voted today to increase the 12 years in prison for conspiring social security tax against employ- against the Franco regime. ees’ pay and employers’ payrolls| They were convicted by an Army from 1 percent to 1.5 percent, ef- court of trying to form an organiza- fective Jan. 1. |tion to push re-establishment of a If the House and Senate follow Spanish republic. were W R MUST GO DEEP T0 - GAIN PROTECTION FROM ATOM BOMBS WASHINGTON, June 12.—It has been the opinion among those ex-l pected to know that deep under- the Committee’s recommendation Thirteen ‘persons in all the annual collection for social tried. Among the six security insurance will be increased |Was a woman, Julla Diaz. from the present $1,300,000,000 to $2,000,000,000. The Committee stipulated that '-EAVE G- s- pA(KS the tax shall be 15 against em- ployees’ pay and employers’ pay- AI BODDING GARAGE rolls for a five-year period begin- | S0,y S, | BY5P.M.TOMORROW Under the original social security @ iact, the tax will advance to 25| Brownies and Girl Scouts who are | against employee pay and employer going to Scout Camp Sunday are payrolls next January, unless Con-|requested to leave their equipment gress takes some action before that, at the Bodding garage and ware- time. j house on Ninth Street, rather than at the residence, according to an announcement by Mrs. C. C. Carter, |Camp Committee Chairman. It was formerly announced the equipment was to be left at the Bodding residence, but it will be much more convenient to have it |left at the garage, where it will be |loaded onto trucks for transporta- iucn to Auk Bay. Five o'clock to- tmarrow afternoon is the deadline for getting the packrolls tc the gs age, girls and their parents arc reminded. ground installations would form| ————.—————— effective shelter against the ex-, BUILDING PERMITS plosion of atomic bombs. but the Five building permits issued by officials have found their opinion | to be someéwhat naive in the light of recent experiments. The Catholic School for installa- At Aberdeen, Maryland, the, tion of a new heating boiler, esti- Army has been conducting tests tO|mated cost $1,400, Harri Mac see how deep the explosion of the|ghop contractor; E. O. Davis, for bomb can penetrate. So far, they've | repairs to porch, foundation and discovered that even 200 feet under- fjoor at Bindseil Apartments, 108 ground isn’'t deep enough. Caverns Gastincau avenue, $200; Church or air raid shelters 200 feet in the|of the Holy Trinity, basement re- earth em to afford only scant pajrs $1,200, W. J. Manthey cc protection, if any | tractor; Wilbur Burford for Col. Leslie E. Simon, Director of | car garage at Gold Belt av the Aberdeen laboratory, says| residence, $800, Hans Berg they'll arrive at more specific fi-|ractor; Gunnar Blomgren, gures after the bomb tests at Bi-lway and remodeling, between kini. Then, says the Colonel, they! gleventh and Twelfth streets, $400 can determjne at just what helghti Don Abel contractor. an atomic bomb should be explod-| i s ed to crush solid rock to a depth FRANK R. CLAYTON HERE of 150 to 200 feet - ' Empire Want Ads bring results the City of Juneau during the past week were granted to: one- { Frank R. Clayton, of Ketchikan, ! is a guest at the Baranof. showed. home, office and store w: to attend the———— at ELKY' MUSIC by the We love our Flag with the same fervor its creators Let’s fly our Fl SPECIAL FLAG DAY EXERCISES FRIDAY EVENING AT EIGHT WILLIAM SEAMAN at the Piano lag every day from every indows, and do not forget the HALL L CITY BAND and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA acquitted - lem of solving the Alaskan shipping - s ! problem Gl S ! iy 3 N 14 TRUCE BREAKING | N Y i y jcer si that if Communist fo }m Manchuria did not stop attack- B} government positions, Tu would |have to take action. | (In Nanking, the government’s {contral News Agency said govern-| ment Maj. Lei Feng-chiang,.mem- ber of a communications team, was killed Monday by Communist am- bush on an inspection tour with a Communist representative. The agency said “the Communist had cxcused himself just before the !shooting. It did not give the lo- |cale.) This as fellow: pericn, 12,000 tim it Extension fo June 30, 194 Foreseen Unless Problem Solved GTON, June 12—Sena-! g g% WASHINGTON, June 12.—Sena- tor Magnuson (D-Wash) said today (o‘sml that if a solution of the Alaskan| | shipping problem is not reached by| I", out YESTERDAY next March 1 the Senate Appro- | printions Committee will seek 0, a1ocen Goastal Airlines flew the |extend the life of the War Shib-|owing yesterday to Ketchikan: ping Administration until June 30, » B Estabrook, M paulsen: . to 1947, to continue operation of the pereshurg, W. White, D. Statier, H. M. Gilligan, B. Muilenburg, M. Muilen- The WSA has been operating the burg, N. Banfield, H. C. Gilder, H. lines at a loss during the war and Gprvan, G. MacDougle; from was ordered by the House to end pegershurg: A. Weydalich, J. Eding- its operations and return the fleets i), to the owners next December 3l.| prom Ketchikan: Mrs. N. Turner, The owners told the Maritime ¢ . Scansen, N. S. Twenhofel, Commission that unless they were pink Clayton; to Todd: R. Onlon- granted a large increase in rates gnina, M. F. Stockwell; to Sitka: they would not resume operation j J Anselm, J. S. Paynes, C. Dan~ of the Alaskan service. Alaskan jels, 8. Konnimsky, Mrs. William interests said they could not af- Thomas, Mike Monagal; from Sitka: ford to pay the increased rates. 'Fred Bryant, Ollie Young, June The Senate extended the life of Goddard, L. A. Parsons, T." Mor- the WSA until next March 1 and gan, T. Morgan, Jr. Magnuson said in an interview - that he had been assured by the FISH LANDINGE Senate Appropriations Committee morning’s fish landings that if the Alaskan shipping prob- Oscar Oberg’s Hy- remained unsolved at shat Ibs. halibut: John it would extend the OPera- sunderland's Viking, 9,000 lbs. hal- | another four months. ibut, both bought by Sebastian- Maritime Commission and Stuart Co.; an nt Alstead’s the House Merchant Marine Com- | Thelma, 6,000 lbs. halibut, bought mittee ncw are investigating means by Coastal Fisheries. The BY CHIANG GEN. SAID UNFOUNDED PEIPING, June 12—A Commun- ist spokesman today charged that rnment Gen. Lu Li-ming had abrogated Chiang = Kai-shek's or- ders for a 15-day truce but U. S. and Chinese government officials said he was mistaken. The spokesman had asserted that Tu, government commander in Manchuria, informed the executive (Siro-American Truce) headquart- ers here that his troops had assum- cd the offensive. Learning of the Communist's as- serticn, both U. S. and Chinese gov- ernment representatives at truce headquarters gave this explana- tion of the misunderstanding. The Red version apparently orig- nated at an operaitonal officers’ conference when a government offi- T AT the way fo BUY 4\ N g ) ) N { N { ! i | ! { { VALUES N { i N N | { Phone 16 or 2 Free Deliveries Daily 10:30 a.m., 2:30 p.m. AIRLINES ‘ 00000000000 0000000000000000000000000000 “OMMQWM In the M For men like good food and plenty of it . . . So your answer is. . . PréGery wiGe Juneaw’s Gldest u Muket Matanuska POTATOES HUNDRED POUNDS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1946 YACHT ONAWA HERE BETWEEN (HARTER IRIP | Audry Bonnell, Patricia Sey, Gladys Hawkins, Stanley Stretton, Hardy The Campbell Church, Jr. yacht|Parvish, Vern Murray, Jean Welsh, Onawa, skippered by Patrick | Bernie Oliver, Frances Whalen, O'Leary, is in port today between! Margaret Shafsky, Sam Shafsky, charter -par 3 Janine Bramer, Theodora Bramer. The Onawa returned Mr. and! To Seattle: Emil Fisher, Mabel Mrs. Alkert Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs.|Fisher, Hal Windsor, Jack Mann, H, Winston, and Mr. and Mrs. An-!Irene Mann, Henry Rosen, Frank derson Owen, all of Chicago, from Lahtonen, Eleanor Warren, Charles a hunting and fishing trip to the Holland. Chatham Sound and Kelt Bay dis-i Claude Carnegie, Ida Carnegie, tricts Monday. {Wayne Rawson, Harlin Parsons, The party shot six bear, in- Ruth Catron, Reva Petters, Ray cluding four brownies (one a nine- Simpson, Avit Dixson, Alicia Lane, {and from Seattle, to Whitehorse |and to Fairbanks: From Seattle: Warren Knake, Robert Vosa, Betty Emnerton, Char- les Mangum, Mrs. Mavic Mangum, footer) and fished salmon aroundLilly Wallace, Goldie Kavas, Lois Belle Island and trout in various Eddy, Harold Eddy, Steele Cul- streams. | bertson, James Anderson; to White- Guides were Bruce Johnstone and horse: William Skinner, Margueriie Wes Meyers of Ketchikan and Arn-jEkinner; to Fairbar Leonard V. old Isrealson of Petersburg. Roland. Due to fly from Dallas, arriving ! s Monday in their own plane, are Mr. d Mrs. Clint W. Murchi n‘s F anrd tflr:::lr gur:sts, I\;: and Mrs.cws:l‘-i on o omer I a 3 d Mrs. Royal ICm(Ilanni‘xn ':\lr:: :f/[rDz:l;as. "I?)’e g:)u-l Alaska Governor ty will beard the yacht here. I g s 1 arty will fish d crn The party will fish and cru Dles’ (al“o'nla SEATTLE, June 12—Military fu- neral services were held for Paul o to from June 17 to July 7, return to Seattle on the Onawa, M “O'zeary said that the Onawa Myers Bone, 67, Pacific Northwgst will ke -in and out of Junzau all Dewspaper publisher and son of the DS fchrar National Cemetery, Saw- i telle, Calif, friends learned today. PAN AME son’s pilot will fly the plane Seattle summer, returning to Ler home late Scott C. Bone, former governer port Seattle in the fall. jof Alaska, last Wednesday at the [His mother, two sisters and four brothers survive. 18 I“; 24 6O OUT| LISTEN to Mrs. Elton Engstrom, R ! Republican Candidate for the Pan American Airways yesterday House over KINY, Monday, 7 p.m. flew the following passengers to (295-18) ert ?NonthetJune Should 5% aman's heart is still through his stomach . . . YOUR FOOD SUPPLIES AT GALORE--MORE IN THE STORE 24 006 0001000000000 SA.M.toGP. M. 50

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