The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 18, 1950, Page 2

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/ promise to our customers ¢ e \ Time brings out the worth’ of a man . . . or of an institution. We are proud to sell MICHAELS-STERN clothes . . . because the century of character behind the MICHAELS-STERN label is a credit to this store. It is also a sincere . . . that each dollar they put into a MICHAELS-STERN suit is invested wisely ++ . nOt merely spent! $60 B MBERRENES),, g, B e T | ANDITS GET $1,500,000 INROBBERY CAP SQUADRON BE HOST TO OFFICERS AT DINNER TONIGHT 'Aordung Joan Wa Pre-Nuptial Parties Honor Betty Bonnet, Future Mrs. Kendler Miss Betty Bonnett, tride-elect »f Mr. Joe Kendler, Jr., is being honored at a number of parties be- ore her marriage next month. The wedding will be at 8 o'clock Friday evening, February 3, in Holy Trinity Church Mrs. George Varness entert aing in Mrs. V Channe] Apartment Fleek and Mrs. Ing Monday eve- home at the , with a shower 1 ed or the bride . A handsome ake lettered “Betty and Joe” cen- tered the candlelit refreshment table, which was decorated with jellow and white chrysanthemums and deep blue iris Prizes in scrambled word games were won by Misses Betty Lou hto, Lucille Weir and Irene Cashen. Cther guests, among them many school chums, were Misses Bonnie Keithahn, Thordi Larsen, Dorls Wahto, Jennie Hart- man, Norecen Bishop, Pat Grove; Mildred Steen, June Eliason, Watkins, Irene Williams, Lorene Feero, Borghild DeMers, Margaret Pearce, Alfreda Dore, Phyllis And- rews, Evelyn Pasqu Claire Shud- r and hift and Mrs. J. Mrs. A. Bonnett, Mrs. Harry Lea a Edna | Polley complimented Bonnett Friday evening with a misczllaneous chower in the Lea home. R sh- ments were served from a lace- covered table centered in an ar- rangement of astors and white | tapers. Guests were Mesdames John | Brillhart, James Wellington, Clay- ton Polley, C. E. Rice, Addie Mc- Kinnon, Samuel McPhetres, Ken- neth Lea, Helen Roff, George Fleek, Ing Varness, J. A. Kendler | A. Bonnett, Dale Steen, Kenneth | Lowe, Jack Guerin and F. Pear |and Misses Margaret Pearce .md Fdim Wellington. STRIKE THREATENS A dxsungmshed party of omcex*‘ koarded a B-17 this morning at,ler director, Eimendorf Field, Fort Richardson, | ¢idered Chrysler's to be guests this evening at a spe- | cial dinner meeting of the Juneau (Continued from Page One) s staton in Upper MAnhal- on with three men in the front eat. | § “Give us 10 gallons of gas and | y up akout it,” he quoted the T as saying. Koziatek said: “I then started to pump the gas,| and I put about five and a half | g4llons in before I looked through the window into the rear of the| c4r. On the -ack seat I saw what Igoked like ladies’ stocki with hblespin them but I looked again | apd 1 saw they were full-faced | s—black masks—like Hallo- | ‘en masks.’ | $Seven men, all wearing Hallowe'en | nfasks, entered Brink's, Inc, al mo! transportation firm, last njght and robbed attendants who weere counting the money. After the rébiery Boston police broadcast an ajarm for a Cadillac, : RCBBER'S DELIGHT ¢BOSTON, Jan. 18—A—A r's delight.” jThat was tective described last night's mil- lipn dollar cash holdup at Brink's, Ihc, the armored car firm that Hcks up and delivers payrolls and rgceipts for most of the city’s banks od industry. IMost of the bills were in small nominations—$20, $10, $5, $2, $1. “rob- me of the money, howsaver, ‘A Brink’s official told police that fna] numbers would help as much the loot was in new bills. :This money, the official ex- mained, was mixed with older bills which can’t be tracked down very sily. iDeleui'.es may e able to trace| the way one veteran | Civil Air Patrol. They arrived at ‘24 pm. Brig. Gen. Frank A. Armstrong, | Jr., chief of the Alaskan Air Com- mand, had accepted the invitation of the 2'2-month-old Juneau group, Lut was unable to come because of mander; Maj. Virgil Stone, Assist- ant Wing Commander, and Capt. | J. D. Stone, CAP-Air Force liaison officer. Juneau Squadron members will gather at 8 o'clock this evening in the Baranof Hotel Terrace Room for a no-host dinner in honor of the officials. The local squadron i the first organization in Southeast Alaska of the Civil Air Patrol which is an a iary unit of the United States Air Force. PAASIKIVI HAS LEAD IN FINLAND (By Associated Press) It appears that President Juho Paasikivi of Finland has won suf- ficient electoral assembly votes to continue in office, despite a bar- rage of Soviet and Finnish Com~- munist attacks. Voting took pl/ace the past two days. Results of the voting, however, led observers to believe the Socia: Democratic government of Premier Karl-August Fagerholm may have to resign in favor of a coalition government, “Leghorn” hats actually are made in Fiesole, a suburb of Florence, Italy. e ATTENTION Painters’ Local Meeting Tonight Imporiant Discussion on New Coniract, Etc. Protect Yourself by Attending | | Motor Company | illness. In the party are Col.| | Jack Carr, Alaska CAP Wing Com- | | | | | | $ | power [~ AS AUTO WORKERS REFUSE $100 OFFER DETROIT, Jan. 18—(®—The CIO United Auto Workers, rejecting Chrysler’'s $100-a-month pension offer, handed the corporation a “| seven-day strike notiee today. The ultimatum was handed the | company at the start of regularly &:heduled negotiations today. There was no immediate ment from the company. Norman Matthews, UAW Chrys- said the union con- pension offer, “unsound and com- made late yesterday, inadequate.” Total benefits in the offer amount to only five cents per hour, Matthews said. In a recent pension agreement between UAW and Ford union gains were estimated at 10 cents an hour. Chrysler has declined to set any figure on the cost of its offer. SCHWINN BIKK~ AT MADSEN'S THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Deporfation Decisions By Supreme Court Florida Picketing Law Up- held - Judith Coplon Loses Her Appeal 18— (A — a vote of 4 WASHINGTON, The Supreme Court Jan, by plit cn identi- the govern= r brides and W wring if it ders them po security rigks. o deportation cases were‘de= y the court, one involving lumeit, a one-| The tribunal also cal lines in ri Y exc or in the German-American umeit was accused and con= i victed of plotting with other per- sons’ to deliver military secrets to Germany and Japan. His natur- alization was cancelled in 1944' on it was illegally ob- n the Attorney | o deport him, Wil- | a 1920 deporta- apply to him be- an alien but a the ground tha tained. But ,w i General sought lumeit contended tion law did not | cause he was not naturalized citizen was convicted commit espionage. In the second the Supreme Court Richard Eichenlaub, ¥ of conspiracy to deportation case, ruled against a former New York restaurant owner convicted in| 1941 of having conspired to act as an agent for Germany without| Leing registered as a foreign agem.: EXCLUSION CASE { | In the exclusion case, the court| Ix':h-r,l specifically that Mrs. Ellel Knauff, Germs: rn bride of an American veteran was properly de-; nied admission to the United States solely on an order of the Attorney General. The court minority argued that the government should have Zeen required to prove openly that she was regarded inadmissible. In other actions of the Tribunal Upheld in effect a Florida ] ih\\x‘ which restricts picketing to the | immediate premises of an employer | —— e — to 3 has upheld vernment | right to de alins who lose their Ameri citizenship. me | at the time he ROCKET - FIRING SHIP NORTHBGUND, CALLS VANCOUVER SEATTLE, Jan, 18—(®—District Naval Headquarters reported today Gulf of Alaska will visit Vancouver, B.C. next Sunday. The ship is the USS Norton Zound. It js enroute from Port | Hueneme, Calif. The Navy has announced that »ne or more high altituds sounding rockets will be fired frdm the ship’s after-deck in the north. It is described as part of the avy's cosmic ray research pro- am. Recording devices are an im- rortant part of the experimental equipment, The Navy said the Gulf of ka was selected i-ecause there lare Lelieved to be an important | relationship between the earth’s magnetic field and the activity of »smic ray particles in that region. While the ship is stopped in Van- couver, Capt. John Quinn, USN, | the commander, will make a cour- tesy call on the mayor. l ~ ATOMIT WANTED EVEN IF WE 'MAKE SUPER-BOMB WASHINGTUI, Jan. 18— (@ — cretary of State Acheson mad !clear today that even if the Unit- ed States develops a super A- bemb it will stick with its policy of seeking tight international con- (rol of atomic energy. | Acheson discussed the subject in circumspect language in response to questions at a news conference. As hes phrased it, he said he lces not know of any prospective tomic weapons development in the Al | | United States which would cause the United States to change its |policy on international control. Acheson knows, of course—as ‘ru es most everyone in Washington | —that the government is hotly de- |rating under the surface the ques- ion of whether to try to develop 1 hydrogen atcmic bomb that might e 1,000 times more powerful than |the original uranium A-bomb. He also said he knew of no at- cmic developments in Russia that would make the United States want involved in a labor dispute. 2. Rejected a legal move by|!0 change its policy. Judith Coplon to win a new| WA i espionage trial here on claims that{ Residents of Rodanthe, N.C. a the FBI tapped her telephone village on Hatteras Island, cele- wires to get evidence on which she '\\ax convicted last June. She and Valentin A. Gubitchev, are await ing trial in New York on-espionag conspiracy cl*mbcs IS F()l D DEAD Brock Perry, 67, was found dead Iyestcrdny in cabin number one of ime Bus Depot Cabins, He had ep- parently died of a heart attack. | ] Mr. Perry was born in Queens- town, New Brunswick, and came {to Alaska in 1940 from Cle Elum, Wash. Leghorn hats take their name from that of the Italian port through which they are shipped. And you en]oy €| ANOTHER CLIPPER EXTRA— gl Bl The big 4-engine Clippers are extra dependable...provide extra (5 speed*¥=> comfort Q world-famous \f SEVENTEEN YEARS WEVE TIOWN ALASKq For speedy Clipper service, call . BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 Lav ArERICAN Worio Arwars @ Trade Mark, Pan American dirways, Inc. L, TO SEATTLE * HAWAII * ROUND-THE-WORLD * KETCHIKAN JUNEAU * WHITEHORSE | * FAIRBANKS * NOME Lrate Christmas on Jan. 6, the an- cent “twelfth night.” the ship from which experimental | cocket firing will be held in the | 1% CONTROLS | CLEARANCE SALE OF LADIES’ COME EARLY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1950 ROTARIANS PLAN | VALENTINE PARTY | SAT.. FEBRUARY 18 Whether the Rotary Club Val-| entine party will be a formal dinner dance or a masquerade affair was their choices. Exactly 50-50 was the count, so the matter will have to be decided at the meeting next Tuesday, ac- cording to President Bob Akervick. | Thére will be a Valentine party —that vote was 100 percent. It will be in the Baranof Hotel Lounge and Gold Room Saturday, evening, February 18. At 7 uc]ocl\! for cocktails, 8 o'clock dinner andg! 9:30 dancing? Or 9 p.m. dancing| (in ccstume) and 11 o'clock butfet supper? Next week will tell, NATIVES OPPOSE RESERVATIONS, ) SAYS ARCTIC GROUPf Opposition to the proposed re-| at.ons put forth by Julius Kruz | to his eing replaced by In-| terior Secretary Oscar Chapman was voiced in Nome by the Arctic Native Brotherhood, it is an- lnounc“d by George Sundborg, hmd ot the. Alaska Development Board Sundborg said he received a wire | from Antonio Polet, board memb ! of Nome, while he was attending the field committee meeting in Ket- | chikan, stating the Brotherhood el- | dorsed opposal of re atior i The Nome group rep: cse'n Eskimos in the area, not far trom | the twin villages of Shungnak and| Kobuk, which were to be in center of a large reservation posed by Krug. Other res: were in Southeast Alaska Ketchikan, and ancther tion of land. se: ne sentiment expressed,” } telegram read, “was \ drawal of land is a detrimental step backward to progress and de- | velopment.” Sundborg spoke of reservations ore the commit- | tee meet, and the board’s record of Leing opposed tc the idea he con- sidereg strengthened by the Nome | action. While the Brotherhood is compesed of natives in and near hat city, it is assumed their atti-| e largely reflects that of othcr] on the subject! Pumps Ties Straps to have been decided by membpers |71V there is no knowledge asto (votes at the weekly meeting yes- who “will be boss o{ the reserva- terday. tion, and many natives now live Chairman T. A. Morgan distribut- outside the area involved and their ed “pallots” outlining both plans, mmnlia»,v:wc established in white and Rotarians faithfuly indic | communities, from which they {fcrm calling for more sccialism, continued ratic g and price con- | \trols. The conservative program is| expected to be announced next| native groups throughout the sec- end dnmon where Kobuk and Shungnak lie. A le(wr from Ben Mather, na- tive resident of Hydeburg, was re- ceived by a Ketchikan publication, n‘n opposed to the reservation plan. Mather gave three reasons for his attitude: no salmon propogate bays in the proposed area and wood is so poor it good for firewood would not I'ke to move. The natives are to vote on ac- ceptance or rejection of the reser- vation plan in the near future. Laber Party in Brifein Sfarls (a@a/ign New| (By Associated Press) | Britain's labor party fired thel pening gun in the general elections ast night by releasing a party plat- | week. The election is February 23. The nation’s only active battle- ship, the 45,000-ton Missouri, still is hard aground in Chesapeake Bay, but two of the Navy's biggest tugs are on their way to try to free her. The battlewagon’s oil has been pumped out to lighten her, and now the ammunition is to be taken off, too. LOOK SMART-KEEP COZY Wear Amazing New SUZETTE Scarf-Hat ONLY $l 98 S —= /7 Most becoming -y \" style in cold, wind, rain or snow. You </ can look “dressed up” or casual . . . Pamper your rars and throat during . raw cold weather. | Fits any headsize! Made of kitten- soft, jersey - back suede cloth. State Drape or Tie 1st and 2nd choice of exciting colors—order se L Fine for gifts. COLORS — Black, Green, Red, White, Gold, Grey, Kelly. Send $1.98 cash, check or money order, or C.0.D. plus charges. 10 day money-back guarantee. EAGLE SALES CO. 2461 North Clark Street Dept. JA-61, Chicago 14 Brown, Dark Why Are You Sick? Our complete will give you the facts— EXAM °3 INCLUDES: Blood Pressure Chest, Lungs, Heart Sinuses, Nose, Throat Urinalysis (Bring A. M. Specimen) Pelvic Exam. (Women) Kidneys and Nervous System Prostate (Men) VERBAL REPORT IN SIMPLE LANGUAGE Br. John M. Mentgomery, D. C. Juneau ' Phone 477 Main and Front Sts. SHOES Don’t Miss These Values 155 PAIR $1 - Brown Broken Lois and Sizes of High and Low Heels 272 PAIR High and Low Heels 3 Black Brown Green Blue Some Loafers and Oxfords in This Group 178 PAIR Suede and Calf $5 Beige Black Brown Grey Values to $10.95 SO. FRANKLIN STREET Sale Starts 9 A. M. Thursday ' HUDSON’S H e “ e PR

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