The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 5, 1950, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXXV., NO. 11,496 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1950 _— ey e MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS EARLYACTIONON McCUTCHEON SAYS | NO DECISION [TANANARIVERICE | Misicrsva iy ¢ SNAPS Library Drive Reaches Top ~ STATEHOOD BILLS | AIRPORT FEES NOT 1S STILL UNMOVED | _ ADIUDICHIOR HERE ™~ 2 . Now PROMISED| PORK 3ARRELING'| ON STRIKE | " eanty repois| DOWN ON | As Hotel, Restaurant Union VIS i 1 ! “a WASHINGTON, May 5 — (B — ! r - y o RN The legal fee paid Attorney s“‘“‘ i Latest word from Nenana is that Early action on bills to make Ha-|ley McCuytcheon for services g!ven the Tanana River ice was sl\lshyl Ings e w' !p < wail and Alaska states was prom-|the Alaska Repartment of Aviation yesterday but still unmoved.’ - ised today by Chairman O’Mahoney | over the past eight months—to date It is impossible to judge the tmck- —_— ;\%fl% o i Senate Insulariamounting to $5,600—is not “pork| SEATTLE, May 5—P—An official |ness of the ice in mid-river, sinez | Sh N . Bellhops rushed down the h"l“nnd Restaurant Employees Union ;' ms"““““ = barrel” cash, he claimed today. of the Alaska Salmon Industry, Inc.,|it is no longer sate to walk on. But arp Oie‘ Says Amefl(an with suitcases flying in all direction: l,, Srient e ki welb i cfi::r:;eeonwt:gdfl:ia:.pflxw,::c;h?gn'n;:u;?:c? o‘]"":fl::; \\hlich has been threatened with a |observers said it was about three Plan e Was Sh0| Down —cooks threw flnp)acks~unures‘es Never wis s Tnore: doticibibl sl bAIL he told reporters: bomlopic i) B il strike, met yesterday with repre- | feet thick in some' places, and oniy | | tossed dishes—hotel clerks beat theserved up to members of the board “Thire Will be'Bib committee de- |8, Setrw “ ity directrogr sentatives or’ the International{a few inches thick in other loca- _Char e Is Made bell like mad—engineers popped off | —B. Frank Hentizleman, regional 1A 16 TOOEAIARRIAG ‘the-bills, We'l Avt i l“fln(l}!;; r:;)fl‘l" (;::lrsld WII-I Long‘shore_mens and Warehouse- | tions. The ice in mid-river is now | B g the boiler—and the cashiers rang|forester; B. D. Stewart, retired com- handle them as quickly as p;).sslble' mmsr“;l)(;use Ri- resentative Maréus meis Union (CIO) on demands of | cut off from both shores by chans s o up $70,000 on the clanging register | missioner of mines, and Dr. James o . Whe . ‘CUOMIUEEN comlated “-} I3 5 1}::1 i non-resident cannery workers. nels of open water. WASHINGTON, May 5—#—The|of the Juneau Memorial Library. |g, Ryan, commissioner of education. s e ensen and Sheldon Simmons, com- | Walter P. Sharpe, assistant man- | - The Tanana break- up usually fol- United States charged Russia today | The library fund, after four years| mhere were times when things aring on the Alaska bill last week. [ mission member. ager of the industry, said the meet- | lows by one or two days the breag- with flouting its international obli-{of Iard work by those sponsoring|jooked pretty gloomy to board mem- 0 Both bills were passed by the House| The Anchorage attorney, also|ing did not mean, however that the up of the Chena ‘Slough. Last year | gations in dealing with the Baltic|it, hit the top today with a contri- | pers—times when it seemed the “Iast earl?er this year. president of Alaska Airlines, was|employers necessarily wouid open|the Chena, in the heart of Farf. plane incident. bution of 525861 from the Hotel| ontribution” was in. Big donations O’Mahoney said he hpped the re-lasked to explain, at an informal| contract negotiations with the | banks went out at 6:29 p.m. on In a new note to Moscow, the - from large companfes — ranging con; orl the two hearings will be | meeting, his fee for work connected ILWU. May 10. However, it wasn't ungit State Department declared Russia [n-om $2,000 down—bought the prop- ‘l;an;'no; e:?:slderatmn by the end ::;h tl;: ::Dfl:tcl:::;tm ;me:“;;’:: A chane; creating Tocal 7-C |12:39 of May 14 that the Tanand ice had P“‘ forward an ‘“erroneous ag- Gl A(IER D A'RY erty for the structure for $12,000, 1iiaeath ‘Eurnngian, of st Lhr:’u hougt e ey S ILWU. was issued last week to non- | finally went out. Walter C. Welke (above), Uni- count” of the shooting down of the located at 4th and Main Streets; closed the Hawaiian heari 5 - gl 3 .| resident cannery workers. Willian This year the Chena spewed oui | versity of Washington Director |American plane on April 8. then the job of raising the $70,000 awallan hearing with «| The hint that the voucher paid| Gettings, regional ILWU director | its ice at 2:49 pm. on Monday, May § of Instrumental Music and The note said: began. 3 plea that Hawii be granted state- | McCutcheon had been termed “pork 1as announced the industry will b: | 1, but no breakup was reported early his afte: i “The government of the Unitec Weeks would sometimes pass with ¥ hood now. He ‘said A promise ol {barrel” money by the public Was| struck unless the local is recognized ¢ this morning. Foiofx, s GEN NS Bfcenoon yi5 States must warn the government Io DWIGHI “ASF nothing in the coffers—but boasd statehood was “implied when the { brought out by Jer en, a member of [ " “we jus; want to fifd out whai | Hundreds of people are keepin; | PAA from Seattle and will be |0 o givier Socialist Republics ot | members and those in the Rotary ¢ Territory was annexed.” the house investigating committce| s on their minds” Sharpe said. | watchful eye on the tripod locatec | ®diudicator of instrument and | o ceriousness with which it re- '|Club didn’t give up. They kept The only question was the time, | which looked ihto the question after| The cannery workers taken int« | 265 feet out in the Tanan river. 2 | bands during the Southeast Al- | gards (he attitude of the govern-( After 21 years of supplying milt | plugging. Club members contacted be said. *We think this is the time.’ | 1 furor was raised following a back-| {ocal 7-C formerly were member. | wire leads from the tripod o ©| @ska Music Festival, officially |ment of the Union Soviet Soctalist|to the people of Juneau, Frank|business firms throughout the o fire of the voucher from the audi-| ¢ ,5cal 7, Cannery Workers' Union | slock. The clock will give the exac' | starting tomorrow. He has been | Republics in matters of such grave [ Maier is selling his 240-acre Glacier | Channel area and finally the sum vor's office, which questioned its le- | an atfiliate of the Food, Tobacco | hour and minute when the tripoc with the University of Washing- | consequence.” Dairy Farm on the Glacir High- | began to drop. IHOUSA"DS or U S sality. Agricultural and Allied Workers | joes crashing down the river. HOW- | yon since 1929 and before com- Russ Claim Rejected way. One by One (L] Fees Matched The F.T.A. has been expelled tron |aver, the tripod must travel down- fog o il bonst was, at the Unle Rejecting for the second time the| The farm is being purchased by | Large and small groups through- SOI.DIE Money paid by the department for | ;e c10 ftream 100 feet before the clock & | ¢ t 1€ © hres |Soviet claim that the missin|Dwight L. Nash, who owned anc{out the city—fraternal, union, so- RS SEAR(H engineering. work, legal fees, anc| A new local of the United Pack | ripped and the exact second s re | Versity of Michigan for ¢ American plane violated Soviet- | operated a dairy farm in Coos Bay | cial—added bit by bit. Individuals sy acquiring airport sites is matchec | inghouse Workers' Union (CIOS | sorded. years, director of bands and of | ,.0,5ie4 Latvia, the U.S. declared|Ore., before coming to Alaska twc responded one by one. FOR MlSSING Bov by the federal government through | rocal 77, also has been formed tor the:men’s glee club. His musical | this government is forced to con-|years ago. Then a few months ago, came a A Civil Aeronautics Administration | the same workers. The industry ha: ability is reeognlud every where. |clude that Russia “has not only| Final arrangements for purchas- | point when all concerns, most busi- b machinery. Seventy-five percent of| sjoned a contract with Local 177 failed to meet but has no inten-|ing the farm are now being made |ness men, and all groups had FORT LEWIS, Wash,, May 5—4 | fees and like costs are paid by the|anq an AF.L. union covering can- EUROPEA“ tion of meeting the obligations|Nash said today, and the transac- | pledged or given all they could. Still —Several thousand Fort Lewis sol- | federal government, the remainder | nery workers employed. RESIDE"' Io which international law and prac- | tion is expected to be completec | ihere remained some $8,000 or §0 to . diers fanned out over the Nor'l {being stood by the department. Gettings said his union will picke! tice Impose on members of the fam- | Monday. { 30 before the building would become - Fort area today in a search for | McCutcheon said that if his fees | oipg taking supplies to Alaska for ily of nations.” Nash praised the fine farm which | a reality, 3-year-old boy and his dog missin; | were “out of line,” the CAA would| ¢ year's season. RE[EASE SOME The note was delivered in Moscow [ is the result of Maier's years of{ Then the sparkplug of the drive, since yesterday afternoon. not; approye:it; and. thus ot reim- by Ambassador Allan G. Kirk and{work, and said that Maier is still on | Heintzleman, had to leave for Wash- Army authorities said the young- | burse Alaska on the three to one SE(RET FIlB was made public here by the State| the farm seeing that its new owner | ington on government business, But ster, Tommy Jenkins, was last seer. | basis worked out. IRANSPI.A"II"G Department. gets a good start. Stewart and Dr. Ryan dug their toes ki “f‘ 1 pm-,tye;'-erday Led the homc Als"r 9"1’“‘;‘5& "YI Mcc;‘““”; e The note made it plain that thei The farm now has 45 head of |in and set themselves to /get: Il'ut of a next door neighbor on the | were fees pal e lassn, sty o R : 5 1fiac | charges and countercharges over the | Guernsey cattle on it, but Nash ex- | toughest bit. v Norh Fort Ho ts the son of 1 | Amcorage tor encieermng vors | (GRAY]ING WILL Aiess BISINSR] Testifins ] oo an covmierbiee o o ey saitls on B and Mrs. William H. Jenkins. connected with building of seven The the Baltic area with 10 men aboar! | registered Jersey herd in Alaska. It | the drive had reached, so s Military activity on the sprawlin: | fields. This sum amounted to BE I AKEN up Sex“tes}gigfi"z‘y’&“iumfi i But Does Nof Back Up Hikvd, vedohad - wh tithasst, 1936 his, Jersey herd in oos' BaY |in with -6 typewnilee: Hedd . fort whs at a virtual standstll thi | $30,535. 000 from European Recovery tunds M(Ca“h in Fu" That is a stalemate from which|Ore, set a national production re- }story appeared on how the drive forenoon. Soldiers divided * int« | “Authority to retain counsel was A for the year beginning July 1. y further progress cannot be made. |cord over all breeds which stood for | was going—and each day Juneauttes small groups to search specifie« | obtained from the aeronautics com- pae The vote was 47 to 33. —_— Russians Told Off five years. responded with funds which came areas of the 83000 acre reservatior | mission. by Scnwamm,” said e | Terriforial Sporfsmen Hold| e “Saen “wouwa® suinorize tnc | WASHINGTON. May 5— 0 — | e Russians were told that “tt 1s| Next month he will travel to OFe. | 3t imes o rapidly the paper. same- afoot. Some mechanized equipmen | ittorney. “The job grew begin- . p same amount as the House pre- fi:‘m"m Truman’s decision ~tc clearly impossible to resolve this gon to purchase a herd of registerec : times got several behind in re- was being used qomenguy. 1 nave xep <) Meefing With Many | licu, Vorea- 63550000000 tor tne|Mnd oversome government 103 |isaue so lons s the Soviet govern- | ereey catte. - - WM'N personal diary ever since August 5 y third year's operation of the Eco. | 21ty files to Senate CtommM““’g: ZE ment refuses to base its position| “It seems strange to a dnrym.n In fact, we don't hesitate to say mfll "R bel " 3 08 G ROWNIRNS IR -oontecan Subjeds DIS(USS&d nomic Cooperation Administratior; | YeStigators put Senator McCar 1 [upon the facts of the case.” that there are no Jersey herds in{that every person in Junesu was enels with this work and it is open to (ECA). "o work today on a “not enoug The 400-word note was in reply to| Alaska,” Nash said. “They're much | made so ‘“library-conscious” that 5 Venlllre 'mm wu‘s_ Wamen i M. L. MacSpadden will tcil o | The actual money for ECA must 1";"”5‘- ther development, the Jus. | EUSSIa's April 21 communication |lighter cattle and eat less than| just about everyone put some money Ly gt. More Than, Galns Lties | Progress on transplanting graylng | be provided in later appropriation 11 R0 fr Y ll’d i mever ve.|¥hich refected the original Ameri-|other breeds and give 50 percen:|in the fund, or was thinking about wal“ '0 Ride S'uekar He ‘pointed out some difficu i from the Interior to the Juneav |bills to follow the authorization |tice Depar '"ex’l; B Trom the Off. |Can protest and declared “veritied | richer milk.” it. ¥ encountered in obtaining easements, | ¢, o tne next meeting of the | measure. gejved a0y Ayenes t|date” showed that a B-29 Flying| Selling of his farm will mean the | Then came the climax. b T buying land, clearing titles, @n|Territorial Sportsmen Inc. it wa:| Senator Bridges (R-NH) pro-{i6¢ Of Strategic Services (OSS) 10| porress flew over Latvia on April|first vacation for Maler in the 21| Donations toward the last were AN OV R, DO, May S | e O tien. throw moy | decided at a conclave of that or- [ posed the $250,000000 cut. A cut of [SUPPOTt charges that AWEISSS |y wyy photograph Soviet defense!years he has had the farm. piling up and there were some funds Two drawling “Southeraers” fror |.ed my private practice, threw my ganization Thursday night. There | $500,000,000 was averted by a whisker Magazine officials an ahl o installations.” l not yet reported. A call came from * the Yukoh—George and Pat Va. |Mirm's office out of gear, and forced |, "0 oo interect among sports- [ 40-40 tie vote. partment . mployes w?rei . 1;:)5 2] In response, the US. declar Mrs. Cledamae Cammock, secretary Bibbard — got their first glimpse |us to put, all our probate bus:ness men for grayling in waters adja- Senator Taft (R-Ohio) proposed atomic secrets to Russ] aRnubllct;n again that the only American mul- 23 ARE SHAKE"UP ifor the Hotel and Restaurant Em- of the big city yesterday. in the hahigs;of anpher Iirm. cent to Juneau. the cut. Under Senate rules, an|, MCCarthy, Wisconsin Republetw | iary plane in the Baltic area on ployees, to Dr. Ryan, saying she ° They were born at Pelly Crossing He explained’ that what he lost| ™ p ' Soy e o o0 Damed te aihanidmant o’ a DIl Maas. on '« tis]URe $aid 8 former OSS asex:“dwf_ | the date was the missing Navy Pri- was on her way to his office With a 200 miles from Whitehorse, anc |in probate fées alone amounted tof, .4 . ommittee to investigate | vote, festity thak A-homiy ;mtml}nion 1 | vateer. It added that “the United NOHE I" juRED l" $200 check. @ they have “genuine” accents a [“much more” than he obtained| ., report. what can: be 'done Ir T daliate o B Miaci PR its way to 1the nge'rhe g government reiterates that this U.S. (] Eager to Raise It rolling as the hills of West Vir |chrough the department. mparting’ Norwsglan Black Cock, & | cratie Leader Lucas (Tl pleaded {28 Amxeliaskal o esterday there | Navy airplane was unarmed and R“"WAY A((IDE“I The group, at their last union ginia. As an example of legar QiR | large grouse, to the Taku Valley | for approval of the full amount, He | Fronk Bleltskl, sald gestcrt ey M e. | was at no time over Soviet or So- meeting, had agreed to donate $100, L4 The reason, George and Pat ex [ ties encountered, he brought up the President Jack O'Connor gave & |said adopting an isolationist policy is sgme S“t:d n;::‘ T not bt | vlet occupled territory or territorinl but in their eagerness to see the plain, is their father left West Vir | Skagway airport project. He smd_ resume of the deer feeding project | would turn this nation into a “gar- Cult ybasker 'Mccnthy S The 23 passengers on yesterday’s { drive get along, they raised another ginla for the Yukon during th|°hat a rhubarb patch, EaSPBErTyfio gnis region, The Territoria rison state” and double defense Hifly. bao xpd e (R-Mass), whc| The American contention is that|pan American flight No, 923 from |$100 by the old “tarpaulin muster” “ gold rush days. He married a Na |bushes, and a chicken coop on the) g0 temen Tne, furnished over ¢ spending. SegatBo:' las; gt,esmy at a secret |the unarmed plane was shot down|Seattle were shaken up in a minor | route. Everyone dug down—busbays, hanni Indian woman. None of th |site of the proposed alrport SaWsell| ton of grain to enable breedine | Miljtary expenditures now are | e Cepia et D% e Bielask |over the open Baltic Sea. ' accident at Annette Island, but nc | waitresses, bellhops, dishwashers, family ever headed south again. sreat trouble in getting it cleared. | i, t5 gurvive through the win- running at the rate of around $13,- Isesslun. dsa“‘ v:r serious” - Bul injuries were reported, according tc| pantrymen,” fountain workers, hotel George, 25, and Pat, 28, finallyjand took five days alone Just ). mnis was in cooperation with 500,000,000 & year. Lucas said defense [°f,"ay§wnn:a to ycommeni.on the Fred Dunn, P. A. A. district traffic | maids, elevator operators, clerks, ventured out of the wijderness tc | clear it up. 8 those who have heen feeding thi | gosts in an “isolationist shell” would | o geb " ( d' I ' manager. cashiers, cooks, and resident engi- q apply for a federal license to op | At one point in his explanation, | geer, amount to $35000,000000 to $a0. | 00mb angle ¢ et wo|@N@ lanisio While he has received no officiai | neers.’ Thirty-two attended that # erate ferries over the Stewart anc | Jensen broke in to say: The Fairbanks Sportsmen’s Club | 500000000 annually. }%eversm(.f3 rnxr;ent Tonity files, Max account of the mishap, Dunn be | particular meeting. Yilkon Hivers: “The issue with the people,” he| i & membership of 250 members, 6 spoke onblbaiine Besiata Hhavad }:‘ease go: Tt Jaster daly te A"empl Io s‘ale lieves that a down-draft pulled the| When Mrs. Cammock appeared { Thelr ambition: to ride on i fsaid, “I beliéve is not the AMOWNt gy yritten “to the Juneau EXOUT [, yote on the $3372,450000 foreign | oy o sonats Forelgn Relations sub- | ' A ship onto the ground as it flew low | with her check, the three men run- street-car. of money you charged, but thel. qiating desire to affiliate, point- e e et a ftes s Rviiaiaenrek Biats Des Kl p k AI k to approach the landing on the|ing the drive in its final stages T background on it. The attorneyfy,g; out that a. territorial-wide or- i gt s R e Ilfl ed y ASKA | Aunctte strip. The airplane it | were gathered by happenstance in FROM MY SDOSCHMBE general's offlce seemed to have beeh | ganization of sportsmen can sc- bnr'l.\:“(]:;xrthy in his charges on th¢ hard, about where the road crosse: | Dr. Ryan's office—Stewart and the Alberta L. Paystrup of Mt. Edge: | bypassed. Why wasn' an attorney | somplish larger objectives in addi- RESIRI(“O"S unm cy S nism in the government. CORDOVA, Alaska, May 5—P-|near the strip and bounced some [ reporter for The Empire. cumbe, Sitka, is registered at th¢ |retained by him?” tion to local aims. "s':nm,':m Tydings (D-Md., thc]The unscaled slopes of 19,000-foot|150 feet onto the runway, accordin A littles quick figuring revealed Baragof Hesel To this, McCutcheon sald Ne} oConnor said that a casc of ON PALMER HIGHWAY committee chalrman, said in an |King Peak will be tested by a 71-|to accounts of passengers. The|that after this check was in, just wished Williams would send a man | ¢nortsmen-caught salmon had be;: nouncing the President’s decisior |year-old Canadian alpinist. , The,ship was severely damaged and the | ;5361 remained. s to do the job. ; sent with the compliments of the . oval does not appls |climber, N. H. Read, arrived here|No. 2 engine was loosened fi@2 3 i N I'he _w ashln Ior, “But,” he went on, “if he had|rmerritorial Sportsmen, Inc., to each LO:d e’ffififi" we:xeld m:zg"cgf £nzh:h;‘n¥)sprso—caned “raw” files | yesterday with Bill Berry, pioneer |its bracket, they thought. Z Hope I'll Be Back m hired a man and staff, it would |, the sportsmen clubs in Ketchi- | P¢ed res that Pan American chartered Ellis| “I'm going to the union i e P f the Anchorage-Palmer highway| I'ydings added, however, al | zuide and trapper. ! . {sald Mrs, Cammock breathlessly, M R d have cost the territory much more|yan Wrangell, Petersburg, Kodiak. (o according to a wirc | ‘there will be FBI material” ir They will set up a base at Me- |Airlines to bring the passenger: ? 4 €ITY - L0 - LOUNQ | nan x °h“:,ged;h = Anchorage, Cordova, Seward, and{i7tUCY, KO0 TGt Col. John R. | sorhe of the State Department files | Carthy where they will recelve their s, Wi, foo Jonll, iy SNt ;;“‘;“m‘”‘;“fi"’“‘”':" ey e Engineering Fees Fairbanks. i . supplies by air. n three ships late yesterday - i “"’”’E‘X"‘-D‘figz"] ;F‘A'fing“" The question of ensineering fobs,4 A letter Focelyedfrom Amy Sher; Nnyersm;if):d et i uh:d:é:':\l;wzaiefharged that the g‘;ad was the first man ever to|hoon, people.” brought up during McCutcheon' | jock. former secretary of the group [ CORMIROR, Lo | RO (8 o™it Gome | climb 19,850 foot Mt. Logan, east of| On this flight were J. Guy Ar-| She called to tell Dr. Ryan that 'ASHINGTON—A gangling Aus- | outlining his own voucher, and bat- | who is now living in Long Beach. Tl imeavi: ::em 5 ra‘ss b m::ists e T e Y Koy rington, J. Backman, Melvin Butler, | she was writing a check for just trian youth with an engaging smile | tened down by him “because I want | calif., said that 40 spnrts»hshnrmcfir fx::‘ded a:; io;mlssltfn gengmew Edward Beck, J. Borgman, J. J. "h“d“,::“"" which meant the job is the pay-off in a great campaign | to explain my own position first, |there were planning to come tc Carter, Glen Collar, Mrs. W. E |was done. for international good Wil R 1 g . i Alcka his ummer an nad ro- piugts. o g o e reod TWISIERS I“JURE 5 ®®°®®®® ® *lDuis Leif Frikson, Robert Ed-| With 151 members, the union is - Eric Geiger, a Junior Chamber of (Continued on Page Eight) quested membership in the Juneau | >R ig! ”\;lc ot s Loy » A ¢ {wards, T. Goodman, Dave Hobson, the largest organized group in the ‘ Commerce member from Salzburg, club. t‘lp:fcf?:e O‘:E; m:: f$u§w : WEA s Oscar Norman, O. A. Leage, Albert | city. They dol}", get ;:le‘:m n:oney—— F ustria, a ted son lanned to show wildlife s w I“ 3 SIAIES Norman, A. Nicholas, Roberta Olsen |in fact, many Juneauites make more ) of pepa nd now an adopted son| (HORAL, BAND GROUPS ST e Tha Inioaaten Sase s Dis- , ® In Juneau—Maximum, 47; |, 14 ‘O, Ethel Parry, N. G |in a day than they take home in B Geiger has been touring the Uni- RRIVE BY Pu“E Bo"l brict Engineer Willlam' J. Niemi of K ® minimum, 39. ®|Rauch, Andre Roch, Stanley Mc-{a week. ted States as a guest of patriotic A ’ AnoliEages T{Bydthe 1;:18502:1in dzziiLLiV( : ,[,\;"::;‘pu:%fmax‘mum' 18; : Cutcheon and Joseph Rey. ! But waiting on the publl;u: they Jaycees in the U, S, A, living in p I G i g omado. Wings, m 54 Flight No. 906 brought these pas-.| do—and no job is harder that r thzlr homes; taking part in fhe" Fon MUSI( FESTIVAL e er 'uen n i SIo(K ouo“"o"s path across three jafes last night | ® | sengers here from Fairbanks: M | —they perhaps typify the efforts dinner-table arguments, and meet- 4 5 M “' killing at least one person and|e FORECAST ¢ |P. Andresen and infant Davis; Leo- | by everyone to bring the library ing their friends. Kelchikan, Sitks sod Patersbirs ar' a a |s°|| injuring approximately 50. . (Juneau and Vietnity) ® | nard Williamson, Jean Lyons, Mar) | into being, and no more representa- The project began with, letters | ChOral and band groups which will NEW YORK, May 5 — Closins | yjsters whirled across West Tex-{e Fair tonight and Saturday. e |, . Juneby, Harold Woods, Frec |tive group could have put the fund exchanged between the Salzburg | PArticipate in e Musio Pstival Engaged 'o wed quotation of Alaska Juneau mine |, and Oklahoma, then moved into|e 1ow temperature tonight e Washingtan, Dr! Pred $yle. Don | into homs plste, E to start here tomorrow stock today is 27%, American Can |ganggs, e about 36 and high Saturday ©|g o & § < and Amarillo, Texag. dunior Cham. | Scheduled e o i T = Sovereign ‘and Alfred Matson. Julius Heineman, the union’s pre- ¥ bers of Commerce. & _Hally, as one|2nd continue until Monday night, 114%, Anaconda 31%, OCurtiss-| pust storms also Dhg“m thele about 60. ®| coming here from Whitehorst |sident, signed the checks with Mrs. step in promoting people-to-people | 3ITived here today. The Mt. Edge-| HONOLULU, May 5—®—Peter Wright 9%, International Harvester | southwest. ° * | were’ GOL ;- Radkin and his: son.| Camimode: . friendship, the Texans “adopted”|Ccumbe group will arrive tomorrow. | B, Gruening, son of Alaska Gov.[27%, Kenecott 55%, New York Cen-| The death occurred in Texas)|e pRECIPITATION o Ian, of London, England; John Sag- the Salzburg chamber and arranged| A special PAA plane brought par- | Emest Gruening, and Mary Jane| tral 14, Northern Pacific 17%, US. | Bill Kling, 82, was fatally injured| e (past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today @ | 1o 2 OOty PHE S for Eric’s visit to the U, S. A. ticipants from Ketchikan while} Mallison have announced their en- |steel 32%, Pound $52.80%. at Perryton as he attempted tole city of Juneau—037 inches; Joining the southbound flight at nu" Novmms He stayed in Amarillo with a|Sitka choral and band members|gagement. Both are 26. Sales today were 1,790,000 shares. | rysh his family to safety. Thirteenlq gince May 1 — 0.74 inches; |y 0on were Dora Carlyle, boulsL[ 4 different member each day, and|Came over on the SJS, Sheldon| Mfss Mallison, daughter of Mrs.| Averages today are as follows: in- | persons were injured there, four|e gince July 1—65.48 inches. *|Ripke, Don Miller, Elmer Arm- i eventualy arrived in Washington | Jackson school vessel. The Peters- | Laclair Robertson, Los Angeles, 15 | dustrials 215.72, rails 56.25, utilities | seriously. . At Airport — 009 inches; ®ly.ono jJeannie Welsh Walton, Ar-| Denali scheduled to sail from where he watched sessions of Con-|burg group arrived on the Triton,| vacationing here. Gruening is 74328, . l Kansas counted 37 injured. Al gince May 1 — 033 inches; o], Quick, Mary Thielges, John |Seattle Saturday. : gress, took in the Lattimore hear-l“ Petersburg vessel. United Press reporter. . AT LT twister dipped into a housing proj-) e since July 14276 inches. @ |geams, Jerry and Ruth McCarthy | Princess Louise scheduled to sail ing, and met Secretary of State| \(#signment for housing of the s — USCG, KODIAK ect near Great Bend in central| = = " 0 o o o o , olyq B, W. Dols, booked to Seattle, | {rom Vancouver May 10, ‘% Dean’ Achason’ many visitors was taking place this WAKEFIELD HERE In a group arriving from the!Kansas, demolm_ung several of the — | Baranof from west scheduled Congress fascinated Geiger. “It afternoon. |!JSCCIr Air Facility, Kodiak, and |barrack-type buildings. FROM PORTLAND southbound 11 p.m. Sunday. ' i5 so Democratic and so individ- _ erator of Port Wakefield, arrived’stopping at the Baranof Hotel are| | FROM PORTAGE ual” he sdid. “In our Parliament FROM WASHINGTON {)esterdny via Pacific Northern Alr-f Comdr. Elmer A.. Crock, Lt. MORGANROTH HERE Howard M. Weaver of Weaver ‘ McCUTCHEON HERE | J. Guy Arrington of Washington,|lines an is a guest at the Baranof.| Ben B. Dameron and Lt, (jg) James! F. 8. Moreanroth of £2attle is!Brothers, Portland, Ore. is stop-| J. S. Woods of Portage is regis-} Stanley McOutcheon of Anchor< (Continued on Page Four) D. C, is registered at the Baranot,l L. Howard Wakefield, cannery op- C. Boteuer, @ guest at the Baranof Hotel. 'ping at the Baranof Hotel tered at the Baranof Hotel. l.ge is staying at the Baranof, . ;:

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