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PAGE EIGHT SPECIAL SALES TAXELECTIONTO BE HELD JUNE 20 June 20 is the date set for the Juneau COASTAL FLIGHTS BRING 32; TAKE 43 FOREST SERVICE SIGNS BEING ERECTED ON ROADS NEAR JUNEAU | Alaska Coastal are being erected on the Glacier|juneau and carried 43 from here Highway and branch roads near to points in Southeast Alaska. Airlines flights | Carved wood informatfon signs | yesterday brought 32 persons to| E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PLANE CRASH, [Second Judge for 3rd EXPLOSION KILLS glu dicial Division Is 5N (OLOMBIAIGiven (0!1._ Approval| BOGOTA, Colombia, May 25—M) WASHINGTON, May 25 — i® — —a Lansa Airways DC-3 transport| o House Judiciary subcommittee | visions of Alaska, there is only one judge now in the Third Division, Judge Anthony Dimond, and court proceedings are too many for one Judge to handle. Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin will undergo a second operation for hemorrhoids next Tuesday. The ail= ing cabinet minister interrupted SHAFFER’S 49-Phone-13 SANITARY special election at which Juneau, according to the Admiralt; itka: i Voters will decide whether or not| Divicicr Surervicer. y At agheetiay . D, Orebaush |crashed against the side of a vol-|pas approved legislation to create | hospital treatment May 4 to attend they want a one percent sales taX.| myece signs will be located prin-| ginia Calkihs, MZand M0k 'Glrn""a”” last night, Killing 22 passen-|, new judgeship for the Third Dis- | the Big Three Foreign Ministers * g This date was set at the special| ciuane ot road and trail intersec- |Thornton, Ted Borbridge, and Crixis| 278 and three crewmen, the IMe, iyt of Alasks. Like the other di- | conference in London. meeting of the City Council 1ast| yoncto assist the public in locating | Bern; to Pelican: Hele’ 2165 ]annnuncm today. 1{ ten-year-old (i . night, after the sales tax ordinance | yominent points of interest. Prm-!Amy ot Bioed, Cirkon Birley, WBA| sirl was the only survivor. 2 M E A T C 0 5 had been read and passed for the| gi,q) Foreman Willlam Fromholtz| Betty Baskett; to Hoonah: Doris i “.M‘%"gm cx.mm g ke L l N E S 4 k Iu:;!hhmc;i 4 b is in charge of the crew erecting |Sharclane; to Petersburg: Mark E:ll;mrl:;:‘:;m:h:b;::; :,::i"de:;e' E L L l S A I R “ I llt B ' IL P " e ordinance calls for a o - | signs. Meyer and L. G. McDo . ! oy i 3 BE1' xn | SFH cent tax on “mm““da;p:‘:“ Alaska grown and sawed red Ket}chikan: Burley B. Re:’;l:.m:; {,‘f,‘: izu’;tf’\."mm"'bom i nA“'Y TBIPS JuuBA“ To cl“ “ } st . s gl amounting to more than 35 CeNtS. | seqar has been used for the signs.|W. Fowler; to Tenakee: H. J.| ik g sal s | Money collected by means of the| ey are mounted on Alaska cedar | Floresca; to Todd: J. T. Tykerud‘é.! s El.l&pec“dm sed via Pelersburg and Wrangell A FREE ])ELI ' ERY tax would be deposited in a special] pocts Both of these woods are| To Haines: Carl Mahkinen; wf“h'““‘sfcs S:w mf g atne :xpk-’de > With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg ! account and be used exclusively fOr pighiy resistant to the weather. The iSkagway: E. B. Klockhohn; to| S ottt oaid y d artures, at 2:30 P. M. . the purpose of paying off the City’S | gigng were made in the Forest Serv- I Tulsequah: W. Lemesurier, R. D.| Il ml“nov ook A s Convenient afternoan cepartiis a’ 1 4 present bonded indebtedness Ot |jce gign shop in Juneau. All wooden | Brown, J. Switzer, F. Gillis, J il FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 | 1R $556,000 and any future bond issues | gone needed by the Forest Service [Coulas, J. Draper, C. J. Parke! Gl @ - — | ‘ which Juneau voters authorize 1“"‘ in Alaska are maae .a this shop [F. Webster, P. V. Jessome, A. D>Guards Are pl d 1 J civic improvements. | which operates during the | Campbell, J. Henderson, L. E. At-| a(e T SIMPSON | It would also pay “the City's’yinter kinson, G. G. Ovel n, M. Ryan,| . DR. HOBER { ‘ share of the obligation represented R. J. Bryant, A. C. Jacobson, A.| I“ Ber'ln Sedor‘ DR. TED OBERMAN by the presently authorized general obligation bond issue of the Juneau Independent School District and any future general obligation bond issues authorized by the qunl.lu'(i; voters of said School District The ordinance provides that the tax shall end at the end of the quarter in which all bonds have been redeemed or retired. This| would mean, in effect, that the voters of the city would hold the controls whereby the sales tax would be ended: if they voted for a bond issue, they would be voting for an extension of the sales tax Need for the added revenue to be derived from the sales tax is pointed out in the ordinance. To carry out ordinary city functions, retire the existing bonds, pay the city’s share of the school district budget, and carry out planned public works, the city faces the alternative of an in- creased property tax rate or a spe- cial-purpose sales tax. According to the ordinance, cer- tain services and sales would not be taxable. These include funeral charges and medical, dental, and. hospital services, as well as the sale | of newspapers and other periodicals by carrier. The ordinance will have to be} approved by 55 percent of those voting at the al election EMBLEM (LUB T0 MEET, 8 TONIGHT | <. The final mecting of the season of Juneau Emblem Club No. 90 wil take place at the Elks Hall tonight at 8 o'clock. The driil team will meet for practice at 7 o'clock, @h hour before the meeting starts, and all'the 'drll members are reminded of the early meeting hour. This final meeting is a social affair and a progra mand lunch is ‘planned. Arrangements for the program is under the committee headed by Bessie Thomas. The lunch is being taken Berthele Elisen, Anita Garnick, Thelma George, Daisy Fagerson, Margaret Woodford and Jo Jensen. Duguqua Divorce Complaint Filed With District Court Inez Duguqua filed suit for div- orce with the clerk of the district court today against her husband, Herbert Duguqua, a fisherman, charging cruel and inhuman,treat- ment. The couple has been sep- arated since March. They were married in Wrangell in 1938, the complaint states, and have two children, Raymond, 11 years old, and Donald, 4 years old. The complaint, filed by Attorney William L. Paul, Jr, asks $25 monthly for the plaintiff and each child, plus attorney's fees. Prop- erty «in dispute includes household appliances and a trolling and sein- ing boat. CARD PARTY Catholic Parish Hall Saturday (not Priday) May 217, 8:15 pm. | L] For the week-end and holiday 1 the care of by| Ask for it cither way + .. both trade-marks mean the same thing. Johnson, R. J. Carter, J. S. Thomp- | sonyJ. Orange, E. Yakimchuck, and F. M. Hosking From Sitka: Joe Woodford, Mr: lJ_ Welch, Tim Welch, Mr. Oliver, Mr, Gullander, Sam Sing, Dr.| Moore, H. V. Davis, E. Mayo, Helen K. C. GRAND JURY RETURNS 3 MORE IAX I"DICIMENTS Ewart, O. Latimors, Mrs, H. Will-{ orcners Dow i iams, and E. L. Hayes; from Ten- WASHINGTON, May 25—(®—The |akee: Lloyd Reid; from Gustavus: Justice Department today announ-(H L, Jester. | ced three more income tax evasion From Petersburg: Henry Atkin; | indictments have been xeturned by |from Ketchika Sgt. Cranford and 2 Kansas City Federal Grand Jury|Mr. Wade; from Skagway: E. B.| investigating crime conditions in]Kjockliohn, C. D. Hodgen, HG' that city. Stevens, Lillian Stevens and Fred The department said the 'indict-!crick Stevens; from Haines: Ed ments named Walter L. Rain Koenig, Curt Irwin, Howard Mec- John Mangiaracina and Sam Gold-| Rae, John Steer, John McGregor, | berg, all of Kansas City. and Willlam R. Mahoney; from Rainey and Mangiaranci Tulsequah: Leéslie Hill, J. Strachan described by the department and William Kerr. having gambling connections in the S sSSP HOSPITAL NOTES Kansas City area Goldberg was identified simply by his addr the Ambassador Hotel, Kansas City, Gudmun Jensen, E. J. Conant and | The same grand jury last Mon-{ \po Harley Edwards were admitced! day indicted Samuel C. Haydih |, ' ann's hospital yesterday. Jack | W. Gucker, Kathleen Phillips, Don- | ald Dull, Henry Mead and James F. Neilson were dismissed. Wer¢ as former assistant Jackson County, yrosecutor, and Thomas Lococo on! harges of evading income taxes PACIFIC NORTHERN |sovmpocess comvce | The Sourdocey square dance club i will fieet in the grade school gym| Saturday instead of Parish Hall, as | previously announced, for its reg- |ular square dance night. Running a double flight yester- Pacific Northern Airlines brought 12 persons from the west- ward, and carried 23 persons on = outbound trip. | During the next three months Cornelius Howell arrived [rom | members will meet with members vYakutat: Felix Toner and H. C,;"f other square dance clubs on tne;} first and third Saturdays of the Thompson from Cordova, and from | Anchorage: | month at Parish Hall. R. A. Kotasek, Hanyl Bates, Samuel Kelly, Mrs. Esther| Diel, G, R. Jackson, W. H. Stan-| _ BROWNIE TROOP NEWS | baugh, C. E. Olsen, Dr. C. E. Al-| Brownie Troop No. 12 held their| iprecht and Owen E. Rye | final meeting as Brownies on Tues- | ‘ Westbouad, PNA took 16 men day at the Elks Hall | booked to Naknek for Alaska Packv; In the presence of our mothersi ers Association; Elsie Benson, go-| we received Brownie wings and a ing to Kodiak; W E. Mitchell, to| girl scout handkerchief from our! Cordova, and to Anchorage: R. J.|leaders. We were then invested by‘ Pepitto, Ethel Smith, Mary Birkey | girl scouts of Troop No. 8. and John McGregor, | After our investiture ceremonies) we were served punch and cookies| LEGION OF THE MOOSE No. 29 by the mothers of our troop com- | Meets Friday 26. Nomination of mittee. Officers, Door award. Lunch. | Judy Larsen, Secretary. ¢“The thinking fellow ‘ Calls a YELLOW* l PHONE 22 OR 14 FOR A YELLOW CAB order your case of Coke now «+.be prepared for refreshment and hospitality BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY talong the Russian sector boundary Optometrists Associated Press) Phone 266 faor appt. have posted guards (By Red police Simpson Bldg. {of Berlin. They want to keep some German youth” Berlin, from 1100,000 “free straying to the West. West German police confirmed that since Monday, they have ar- rested 15 “free German youth” members for riding in trucks dec- orated with Communist propagain- da. Red officials charged the ar- rest total was much higher. The Communist police force suf- fered two desertions last night. Two young patrolmen appealed to Western authorities for asylum. i COMMENCEMENT AT 8 FRIDAY EVENING Commencement exercises of the 1950 graduating class of the Juneau High School will take place in the High School gym starting at 8 o’- clock Friday evening. The com- mencement 2ddress will be made by A. B. Philii] former superin- terdent of Juneau Public Schools. Thermo-regulated roasted for uniform full flavor + Two kinds—Drip and Percolator For Percolator or Pot Schillin Cof ougy 9!.0» A X0 oy ASCHILLING & °IVISION OF mccomrmic TACOMaN HERE Henry O. Atkins of Taccna, Wash., is a guest at the Baranof. This can eongn only " e 1d's choj ‘Cest coffees, py . bleng, and roasteq 1, Perfection i BERTIL JOHNSON IN Bertil W. Johnson of Seattle a guest at the Baranof -Hotcl. is , ; Rough ‘n Ready For Active Wear School’s out and play’s in! Now’s the time for those rugged, comfortable play clothes your boys need for summer play. Eagle River Scout Camp begins Sunday. Be sure they go prepared with the clothes they need. 7 Sturdy 8 oz. Denim Jeans with DOUBLEKNEES! Sizes 2 to 12 Swim Wear in all sizes Polo S_llirts to size 18 ?laid"SPoft Shirts to size 20 Pajamas, Underwear, Socks, Belts CHILDREN'S WEAR 0. EEN Eagle River Camp Schedule INFANT AND /] JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY © 1950, The Coca-Cola Company K Boy Scouts May 28 to June 10 Girl ;co ts P. O. Box 2511 1 June 19 to July 3 Junesu, Alaska From the Farm fo the People of Juneau : Fresh-Killed Cut-Up ! Rhode Island 1 CHICKENS for Fricassee Ib. §9¢ In 3 to 3% Pound Boxes L Choice Steer Beef Roast | Ib. B9 Hormel's Best Grade Picnic Hams| Ib. 49c Eastern Grade A ' Pork Roast b43c l Choice Beef i T-Bone Steaks| Ib. 89¢ Ocoma — The V;ary Best - FRYERS | Ib. 85¢ Farm Fresh — Oven Ready ROASTING CHICKENS b.69¢ - i Wear a Poppy Saturday | e . —————— — — 2