The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 28, 1950, Page 2

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[ St b s o PAGE TWO NLRB VOTING nes A. Armstro guests Miss Eva Mae Director of Rel- m Holly- an Church of Hol- Miss Sheryl Religious Educa- Pre \‘)_.un.u. - NOGAINS ON i FRONT BY | RED FORCES; ave n elec- Na- Board anc repre- Hope Lodge 1 today . COME disclosed for work- tt the They are Workers' 7, United Pack- ’ Union, and Local horen n (CIO) Reporied Russmns Watch- ing Americans Fight-May Be Up fo Something housemen’s 1 the positis 1 line elect policy of not i dictional di Happenings At Hainesf Associated Press) the By First reports front s on the central front, but on e southwest, end of the 200-mile , the Reds have pushed a river port from ttle a ck through Hadong, ' KOREAN WA 5 Lu- and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA LANE NABS TOP SPOT | IN_DOLLY DIVISION | OF BIG TROUT DERBY I Carl Lane was at the top 4 list in the Dolly Varden dnxslon of the Chamber of Commerce Trout Derby today, after landing a fou pound, 10-ounce beauty. He assumed a comfortable lead over Jack Campbell, who is in sec- ond place with a four-pound two- ounce entry. Catalino Barril Jr holds third place with a three- lpunnd 11-ounce Doily. Genevieve Potter, Dolly Varden division for four weeks with a three-pound eight ounce entry, is in fourth place. Still hanging onto number one spot in the cutthroat division of the derby is Dr. C. Earl Albrecht His three-pound 13-ounce entry has stood off all challengers for five weeks, But E. J. Cowling hasn’t been a lucky. He held second and third spots in the cutthroat section for three weeks with two entries weigh- ing three pounds five ounces. The longer of the two now holds third place, but a three-pound eight- ounce cutthroat entered by John Lahaie has-nabbed second spot. The trout contest began June 1 and will continue until August 15 There is no charge for entering, and AT A GLANCE | (By Associated Press) Korean Fronts—90,000 Reds open 1l offensive all along 200-mile in South Korea. Reds launch attack at center under me artillery cover. American outnumbered four to one, ck to restore positions. ack South Koreans on allied naval units Communists drive miles of Pusan on ciou 1we: counters Reds a ast Yongdok. 60 st front War—he hamper who led the avy rain and low air operations on front, but low flying planes strafe tacking Reds. B-29's plaster Red lines behind frc in more blows, increasing Commu- pply problems and making gent for them. Gen. MacArthur's head- s Korean war has du:l sive stage with Reds quick decision. American reported not far elling ime u. Tokyo juarters eached eeking rounteroffensive off. Lake Success—Russia announces she will end her six-months-old »oycott of the United Nations S¢c- y Council Aug. 1, with Soviet assuming presidency O} a)) figh should be turned in at the Move seen as foretoken|) gerpy headquarters—Juneau-Young £ Soviet vetoes in event of new Hardware Company—for weighing Any trout caught with rod and reel in the fresh waters of South- east Alaska is eligible. ion, renewed pressure to oust Nationalist China. Washington — 128 government races d rushed on more than 10 miles ‘“‘“”t :xime 2 ‘tm K‘:?;?"( w“; Prizes will be given for both cut- (Special Corre to a point only 60 miles from Pusan. ”‘l uild ““ f‘”hA_P‘{“ MY O throats and Dollies, with 30-06 rifles Lo In Washington, the U.S. govern- | Jreater conhic ; rmy m°;‘a‘; ,g; first prizes. fly-fishing outfits sec- | g rroredl ment was racing against time toj000St manpower o mnear 001 ond prizes, and bait-casting outfits | Ben Houser he ¢ g 1d mark before end of year. All en- . | . | I onflict so that it coul third prizes. | up in earnest the business of listments extended 12 months ! ¢ for the possibility of a much | TOUS "f d*“y “‘e“ded e ey ! reater conflict E 1 is watching the Korean ntest with intense interest, to see the Amer ns fight, and some rts in Washington say that if showing is not too good, revise a timetable for uman has ordered the r 12 months of all en- the Armed Services, nearly 300,000 due to ex- before next July. About 44,000 in the Pacific a The ended by six months, ef- 31, the tour of duty of el in foreign service ex- 1 am. a insulation t 3:30 am. to 4 r the Far East Command, out and for & a hose from icers and men will be held as may be neces DRIVER FINED $100 Bowli: 2d $100 Alice M ev-| Kenneth ng was enth bi at her | and gi 10-day suspended jail RO, were by M ate. F. O. Benjy Lee Hou d Jeanie | 2 a he pleaded guilty Ward, Sally Hev m H esterd: to ing driven his car kinen, Patsy Lammers, Joyce Com- | vithout lights or adequate brakes stock, Eleanor Holmes, 0] | speed in ex of the city Ruth, her sister and Marilyn John, | speed limit. e He was arrested Wednesday night Ed Koenig and Bonnie W, wety ofl were united in marriage by the T U. S. Commissionr on July 11 S ot i | Guatemala Capifal witnesses. I R d U d mue me oo pe o | 13 REPOIied Under father, G. L. Dodge, are in Haines H from ove ka for Rainbow | Glacier C Rev. Dodge came| GUATEMALA, July 28—(P—The| ith Louie Rapuzzl.| . pita] of Guatemala was under : — \ state of siege, a modified form | Punchy Hakkinen left on July 14| .t ‘martia) law, as the result of | for Juneau where he | ;i oovernment rioting Tuesday in PAA for Seattle. From | ypicn one person was killed and | 1y will go t0 Camo | .;res were wounded. The viol- nclla; !-C-A;‘ camp for boys.|.;ce grew out of a political cam- ;‘,:“““““I \‘e“‘"‘)m)B; “\ir)::m‘ ““T,“ >aign for the presidential elections b six weeks. He Was| ;pequled for November met in le by his aunt, Mrs. R e ik Harold Brakken FISHERM B T;Rn ant .Slup at the CO.U‘\‘TRY CLUB Bre i .\b .]“~um 1; or breakfast ¢ dinner., Box S sburg ' | unches to go. Open ALL NIGRT! Haines on their cruiser. 66-2t Mrs. Jack Ward had as her guest this week Mr. and Mrs. Jack Morris of Fairbanks. Mr. Morris is @ brother of X Ward and they have not seen each other for 30 y Miss Olive Fisher, s of | the Loys at Hi se is on a month’s vacation. Ruth Morris is taking her place The Princeton-Hall is due Thurs- We take great pleasure lay with 50 delegates for Rainbow in announcing a Glacier Camp. | addition to our staff .. . Mr. and Mrs. Cuily Powell's Erother Ray and his wife Dorothy | spent last weekend in Whitehorse. | T‘)by Patton Mr. and Mrs. Alton Nelson are the proud grandparents of a grand- | z aughter born to their son Dennis DuBarry-Tramed i his wife in Hallock, Wisconsin. | B The baby joins a little biother e L eauty Consultant A daughter was will be on duty daily Mrs. E from 9 in the Juneau f : 4b 8 | ing until 6 in the eve- 5 camp ._qéll;;yi) auy 20 § ning to help solve We hope you will all be e e R your beauty prob- able to take advantage of cast Alaska are (xpu'(d. The lems. / A tev. John Dodge of Skagway her expert suggestions the direct i and advice. Miss Marie Riley, Public Health Nurse, has returned from her v i cation, George Enerest of Haines House is wearing a big smile. He he is tickled pink because he ha a new baby daughter, born in Ju- [ 17 reports fr battle- | ¢ ; showed no major Communist | © A Beauty Program For You new | Juneau Drug Company FALL FROM PLANE; PASSENGER HURT POWELL RIVER, B.C., July 28— | #—A Diotte Airways pilot was killed | IN SEATTLE'S FIRST DRAFTEE CALL - UP yesterday when thrown from his plane into the water three minutes | 28— (P—There? after taking off from Lasqueti Is- | land, 15 miles west of here. 1 Mrs. Marion Cooke, 33, the lone | AlASKAN IN(lUDED SEATTLE, July ere 10 of them—the first batch of Seattle Selective Seryice men called up because of the Korean crisis. passenger in the single engined They all moved through phy maI‘I plane, suffered a broken leg. Res- mental and moral examinations.|cued by a passing fish boat, she The seventh man called was Rich- | was brought to a hospital here. ard T. Hoffstad, from Petersburg,} An eyewitness said the pilot, Ray Alaska. Sims, 33, of Powell River, was seel A Merchant Mariner, Second|to fall from the plane before it | Mate—unlimited—Hoffstad knew he| struck the water. could pass the examination, come| The witness, Charles Williams what may. said the plane fell into the water Hoffstad said he hoped to get a from an altitude of 300 feet. Coast Guard Commission, but “The engine did not cut out,” he added: said. “She just rolled over on her “Maybe the draft will get me|side and fell in.” Mrs. Cooke was enroute here to visit her husband who has been hos- pitalized for six week, also with a broken leg. first. If it does, that’s all right—the job has to be done.” Then the recruiting sergeant said —when all the potential draftees | had gone through the checkup line: “Go home and wait for instruc-; ! tions from your draft board.” ‘poonng plan Is It may be a day, a week or even % 2 Discussed, Paris a month. | Among Sitkans registered at the | PARIS, July 28—#—Six western Baranof Hotel are Mr. and Mrs. | European nations meeting on the ;F;z:nk Wright and J. C. Johnson. |Schuman Plan for pooled coal and SITKANS HERE teel industries have nearly com- FROM MILAN, ITALY | pleted broad plans for an inter- | Cesco Tomaselli of Milan, Italy, | national authority which woulr is registered at the Baranof Hotel. | administer the program. | FRO\! KANSAS C ITY LEGION OF THE MOOSE Mrs. Lillian Wilson of Kansas | Meet tonight. Initiation and lunch City, Mo, is staying at the Baranof | 66-11 | Hotel., i i _— FISHERMEN EARL BRIGHT IN TOWN Earl W, Bright of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. Stop at the COUNTRY CLUE for breakfast and dinner. Box lunches to go. Open ALL NIGHT! 66-2t We were very fortunate in obtaining the services of beautician Toby Pat- ton, a charming lady and an authority on skin care and proper use of cos- metics. She was recently with Frederick & Nelson in Seaitle. : morn- Beauty Department | priority treatment “to all criminal | usual two. PAVING TO AUK BAY, 90 000 MEN | (HANE, DOUGLAS TO. | " geciN I storT TiMe| RIP INTO UL 5. | ALONG FRONT Lconlmued Irum Page 1) Island, and directly across from Fritz Cove, will be 18 feet wide,} and extension of the two-mile ruu(il built north of the bridge in 1940—; the last road built around Juneau. It can be finished within one sea- (Continued from Page 1) sive “one last fling.” Russ Riddle son, the regional forester believed. In the United Nations, diplomats Opens Up Land ipuzzled over Rus sudden de- Much of the land along the pro-,mmn to end her boycott of the Se- posed road is already held in pat-{ curity Council. The Soviets an- ented homesteads, but with the coming of transportation, their owners may cut up their holdings into five-acre tracts or smaller and sell them to those who want to get out in the country—but want a way to drive out and back. The paving of the road to Auk Bay involves widening the present vel road to 30 feet and blacktop- ping a width of 22 feet, giving a four-foot shoulder on each side, such as is the case now on the road to the airport. The distance is about 4! miles. The Thane road, also about 4% miles, was widened last year, and needs only to be paved. This is the case with the Douglas Road as well. It is between two and three miles long. Similar improvements for roads around Sitka and Ketchikan are in- cluded in the special appropriation, which will allow more money from the regular appropriation to be allowed to smaller towns, such as ‘Wrangell, Petersburg, Cordova and other small centers. nounced they will assume the presi- dency of the council in their turn Aug. 1. Diplomats speculated this could either be another step in the cold war or an admission that the Soviet boycott was a big mistake. The Reds chose the time of the attack well, when clouds and rain hampered U.S. air operations. Some U.S. Navy planes, however, flew low over the front in rocket and strafing attacks. The Communists used the tactics which marked their march all the way down the Korean peninsula— infiltration, lunges at weak points and then attack in overwhelming numbers, regardless of high casual- ties. The Reds, outnumbering the Americans four to one, were using possibly their heaviest concentra- tion of artillery and mortar fire thus far. Gen. MacArthur’s headquarters said the next few days might be decisive and might bring the turn- ing point in the war. President Syngman Rhee of the South Korean Republic promised in a broadcast that “we soon shall open an all-out offensive” to drive the Communists back to the 38th parallel whence their invasion gobbled up all but a KEEPS JURIES SENATE REFUSES T0 COOPERATE IN FOR SECURTTY CUT ON SPENDING Atiorney General McGirath_tocay | ordered that one or more federal} Democratic Senator Paul Douglas and juries be kept ready here atlul Illinois says he is discouraged all times to deal with cases of sub-jat results so far in his campaign versive activity. !to cut down on non-detense spend- § McGrath anuounced that thejing. But he says he will keep Justice Department is giving top | trying. 1 The Senate handed Douglas and | matters in the internal some other economy advocates a and defense fields.” Isharp setback yesterday in retusing Under his plan, there will be four {to cut appropriations for river, har- federal grand juries on duty here bor and flood control projects. ‘ after October 1, in place of lhe‘ For three weeks Douglas has been | waging an unsuccessful campaign | — | to get the Senate to cut individual CONLON HERE lntems in its 34-billion-dollar appro- Russell T. Conlon of Seattle is|priations bill. registered at the Baranof Hotel. ‘ gr security ConER Y B P | —_— AT BARANOF HOTEL ‘ FROM FAIRBANKS Kenneth Wye of the U.S. Coast Robert Shapley of Fairbanks 1s Guard is registered at the Baranox stopping at the Baranof Hotel. | Hotel. | - o The preferred beer that’s winning thousands upon thousands of new friends from coast to coast. *Minnesota—Land of 10,000 Lakes FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1950 THREENORTHWEST STATES HAVEDRAFT ~ Wonderful QUOTAS INCREASED #ew'Wax-Starch/ seaTTE, Juy 20n—The tree | |OPTISON'S BR'SK Pa( mc Northwest states will supply hil rchin men to the nation's Septem- | 4 e better than sta 9' @ Gives dresses ber dmft quota, Selective Service | headquarters announced yesterday that “brand new” look. after the Department of Detense is- @ Keeps shirts crisp— sued a revised draft quota. but never scratehy. The new call increased the Wash- @ Keeps clothes fresh ington, Oregon and Idaho quotas by all day long. ® Cut ning time by 762 men. Selective Service directors for tit 25 per cent] respective states said Washington's ’B ik fains Tiiak, the.nw mibitle 2 3 | Brisk contai 3 q}mta il uuld. Be Ubped whoc 4 0 ia‘gricc::ax that blends invisibly with 627, Oregon’s from 181 to 452, and, fibers. Makes any woven material look mml“t 5 h,”m oy 195" smoother and more lustrous. It helps The men must be ready by Sept. keep dirt from penetrating and pro- 8 tects against wilting! Easy to use, too! Dip garments in Brisk solution, squeeze, and that's all! Get economical Johnson’s Brisk today! ECONOMICAL— CONCENTIATED JOHNSON'S riskg Made by the makers of Johnson's Wax TAPEI, Formosa, July 28 — () — The Chinese Nationalist Defense Ministry said 500 Communists landed on tiny Taitan Island, two miles off Amoy, but were killed or captured by its defenders. Red- l held Amoy has been econsidered the jumpoff point for the prospect- | ive invasion of Quemoy Island, key to the Nationalist blockade of Com- munist China’s mainjand. James D. Hoover of New York City is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. The Triangle Cleaners When spots appear, Get on the ball, Grab your phone, Give us a call. e e e e e s e Comsd Mammd "THED. HAMM BREWING. CO., ST. PAUL, MINN ¥ ,‘; Bl

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