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- PAGE EIGHT ANCHCRAGE MAYOR DESCRIBES PLANS FOR CIVIL DEFENSE How the largest city in Alaska is for Civil Defense i anized being or WASHINGTON STATE COL-| Juneau and Douglas Are Represented af Washinglon State ‘ LEGE, Pullman, Aug. Z. — Seven| from Juneau and Douglas are among the 1,632 new students accepted to| < described this noon for members 5 1 was described this noon for date for admission to Washington | . of the Juneau Rotary luncheon meet- | Gold Room. | the person who! for the | Zach- | the responsibility | Mayor ».of Anchorage. | tressed the fact , rage is only three mil- Fort Richardson and Elm- ir Force Base, it is part of rtant potential military tar- While the military would give if possible, in case of attack, being organized to care preparednes: help the cily & for its own Among the points Mayor Loussac imum warning of an \ttack is thought to be 20 minutes 9. The greatest danger probably be that of general confusion, | . City Manager and other De- fense leaders want each person to know what he is to do. 3. In case of a bombing without specific Civil Defense re- sponsibilities should stay home, ready to fight fires and protect their own neighborhoods. Gatherings 1n crowds would be far more danger- ous. 4. Anchorage City engineering, police, fire and other departments are organized for an attack. A blood bank has been established. Doctors and Red Cross are cooperating. Am- bulances are ready. 5. A series of “tryouts” signalled by ens from Anchorage and Fort Richardson is scheduled so that ev- eryone will know what to do should a real alert be sounded. “Our attitude is not placid,” said Loussac, “but it is, and should be, matter of course. People outside are much more hysterical about our vulnerability than we are.” Loussac, who had a drugstore in Juneau for three years before mov- ing to the westward, is in town for meetings of the Al a Housing Authority of which he is a mem- ber. He is a past president of the An- chorage Rotary Club. Gerald Taylor thanked the Ro-. tary Club for sending him to the} Soap Box Derby at Akron, Ohio, where he represented Juneau under the sponsorship of The Daily Alaska Empire. Twelve-year-old Jerry said, “Ev- erything was swell, except losing. | The place was swell, the people were swell to us—so were those major- etts.” The Rotary Club annually | runs the local derby. Rotarian Milt J. Daniel, who ac-! companied Jerry East, spoke brie[lyl and promised to show pictures of the ; Derby when they are ready. These will include photo-finish shots of Jerry’s heat, in which he lost by a matter of inches. Other guests introduced were Jim Hammond of Lincoln, Neb.; Al Wey- mouth of Hollywood, Calif,, and Art Christiansen of Glendale, Calif., all Rotarians; also Hammond’s son-in- law, Will Reedy, Juneau, and Ross Madden, Los Angeles feature photo- grapher. Lloyd Coe was program chairman. HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Danny Constantino, Mrs. Robert Light, Mrs. Ivy C. Cahail and Joe B. Patecsil were admittede to St. Ann's Hospital yesterday. Horace Adams, Mrs. Lemuel L. Batten, and Mrs. Donald Black and her infant daughter were dismissed. ATTENTION those ! REBEKAHS Picnic will be held at Auk Bay Bathing Beach Tuesday at 6 p.m. Bring your lunch. Coffee, pop and ice cream furnished by Lodge. 2t AT GASTINEAU HOTEL W. G. McConnell of Seattle is staying at the Gastineau Hotel. iits own power State college, Claude Simpson, di- rector of admissions, said today. From Juneau: Loretta Keithahn, Carol Jean MacDonald, Robderta Messerschmidt and William D.; Sperling. From Douglas: Herbert Bonnett, Lyle Elmer Riley and Robert Vance Shuff. JUNIOR NAYV Y_Frank Bruggeman, of North Hollywood, . Cal., inspects some of his ship models built of wood and powered ~ with tiny motors which the Navy has used for recruiting displays. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA | ENGINE RIPS FROM PLANE; {DEAD, THURT DENVER, Aug. 22— f an American Air Lines plane| as ripped open when an ine away high over the Cclorado Rockies early today and the big hip landed here with one dead and seven injured. 1 The four-engine DC-6 was bound | rom Los Angeles to Chicago, car- rying 52 passengers and a crew of | ive at 21,000 feet near Eagle, Colo., when the right inboard engine sud- denly broke from its wing moorings. Part of the propeller or a piece f the shattered engine slashed hrough the top of the passenger compartment, tearinz a hole about our by eight feet over the forward hree rows of seats and releasing he air from the p! rized cabin. Pilot R. K, Baker reported the mishap to the Denver CAA office, btained clearance for an emer- gency landing and brought the ship about 100 miles into the Denver airport in 19 minutes, landing with- ) —The cavln i | was required. GAMES TODAY CHICAGO, Aug. 22— (® —The New York Giants came up with five runs in the sixth inning today on four hits and two Chicago errors and went on to defeat the Cubs, 6 to 5. Andy Pafko hit a three-run homer and Bill Serena clouted one Several hundred others are in the process of qualifying for ad- mission, he commented, adding that supplementary lists of admissions will be compiled soon. New students | have until the beginning of orienta- | tion week (Sept. 17-23) in which to \pply, with registration coming Sept. 21-23 and fall classes starting Sept. 25. | Mr. Simpson says that admissions are proceeding al a slightly faster pace than last year, when a large group entered. A large freshman | class, he explained is ppssible to fill | the ranks of the student body which | were depleted by the graduation of | an all-time record class of more| than eighteen hundred students re-|_ ceiving a grand total of 1942 de-"I'A‘l_IWIS'"NG 'I'oo grees and certificates. 1 [} Among the new students where | mens e ner e e "now LIONS PAY TRIBUTE completed there are 1,030 men and | 602 girls, Among the 1,632 there n‘re}'l'o Dou ( FOSIER 1238 coming from:224 Washington | . ies and towns completely blanket- ing all 39 counties. There are alse o 5 o 4 ¥ % 363 students coming from 245 cities | d“_?‘i‘ilo'r:“:r‘“igmn:“ggn "C“F‘Z::é: itial towhs scattsien geogrgphmslly:mizm have -expected some non- ALCplt ol s territories of | o\ co along with the serious trib- the pnlln\x:. Additionally the »e}xismng | ute Monday from fellow-members. foreign colony of students is lo‘be\ First, they praised Foster, who swelled by 31 new students comiNg .. peen Alaska Native Service from 26 towns in 11 countries rep- | qji.otor for six years, for his in- resenting four continents. | iluence on the Juneau Lions Club SRR and on the community. Then they lUNEAu BOAT REPORTED}M(!P a formal presentation of a | bandsemely wrapped ~ package— i that is, except for calling o' K' AFI'ER GROUNDING h Little White Father Lion A fishing vessel, identified in The farewell gift was a wooden messages to Coast Guard head-Indian doll and Foster roared in quarters here as the Santra Doe of | Jaughter along with the rest. Juneau, was proceeding to Prince| Foster will leave Wednesday for Rupert today after being slightly | Minneapolis, where he has been damaged by going aground on De- | transferred by the Bureau of In- Long Island, 32 miles southeast of i dian Affairs. Mrs. Foster and the Ketchikan. | children left yesterday on the A Coast Guard aircraft from| Aleutian Annette Island flew to the scene| At the weekly luncheon meeting after a fish trap night patrol boat|Monday in the Baranof Gold Room, reported the Santra Doe aground. |Alva Blackerby gave the heart- The aircraft reported the dam- felt tribute on behalf of the club. aged vessel was proceeding under He called attention to Foster's | and no assistance | achicvements, especially to the | ipstallation of Mt. Edgecumbe—! | boarding school, hospitals and in-} | to the greatly improved living con-‘ ! ditions at Point Barrow for whch| ihe credited Foster. i | In his ‘thank you" speech, Mr.| | Foster id he will not be gonej | beach plans to re- turn, Guests were Lyle Riley of Doug- las, who was pianist for com- property and out further trouble. Here it was found that one pas-{ senger was dead and seven othersj injured. Al of the injured were; treated at a hospital and released. l A preliminary examination of thej dead man, Jack Krevoy, 54, of Los| Angeles, disclosed no sign of injury { and it was believed he died of al heart attack. The hospital reported those treat- ed and their injuries as including: Krevoy's wife, Mary, 48, nervous shock and exposure; Joan Robinson, 23, stewardess, Chicago, lacerated | scalp; and James MacKris, 27, De- troit, lacerated scalp. Besides Capt. Baker and Miss Robinson, crew members were First Officer Robert Reincke, Flight En- munity singing; Edwin Jobnson and two visiting Lions: Join D. “Snappy” Goodrich of Yreka, Cal, and John S. Walker, Germantown (Penn) public relations counsel. Past President Val Poor was program chairman. He also an- nounced dates for the visit of the new Lions International President, and his wife, saying they would arrive September 16 and remaln through September 18. Lions are planning special af- fairs to honor the visiting digni- tary. COMMUNITY EVENTS TODAY At 7:30 p.m.—Board of Equaliza- tion, Juneau Independent School District, office of the Superinten- dent of Schools. At 8 p.m.—Oddfellows, IOOF Hall. August 23 At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof Hotel. At 8 pm—WSCS Executive Com- mittee of the Methodist Church, M. Peterson. American Air Lines reported in Los Angeles that another plane was being flown here to take the passengers to their destinations. McLEAN ON TRIP Joseph A. McLean, young Ju-! neau attorney, left Sunday on! a business trip to Seattle and| § with gineer Dan Niemic kand Stewardess LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBBY SALMON MANAGER FLIES PAA Guy V. Graham, manager of Lib- by, McNeill and Libby's salmon div sion, left for Seattle by Pan Ameri- can Monday after a quick trip to yYakutat and Juneau. Graham will return to Alaska later in the sea- son. He was a Pacific Northern Air- ways passenger to Yakutat Satur- day and return to June Sunday. HILLYARD BACK JOHN a fast-paced acation Southern California which includ- seeing family members and old friends, John Hillyard returned Sunday via Pan American. He had flown south several weeks ago Lt. John Schifferer, USAF, in the pilot's private aircraft, Jack having been transferred from Elm- endorf AF Base ,to Loyery Base, Denver. Hillyard and Toni preceded Al entertainers in ble Room, Alter enjoyed seeing Harry (DiMaggio) Wham, who and Betty Bello as the Baranof Bub- FROM LOS ANGELES Al Weymouth of Los Angeles is i at the Baranof Hotel. TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1950 WSCS EXECUTIVE | COMMITTEE MEETBi The Women’s Society of Chrlst-‘ ian Service Executive Committee of the Methodist Church will meet to- | morrow night at 8 o'clock in the‘ home of Mrs. Harold Schultz. | IN PORT FWS MURRE | The FWS Murre skiopered by | George RZritten arrived in port| Sunday morning from Fall Creek | in Wrangell Narrows where a fish | trap is being constructed. The| Murre leaves Wednesday with sup- | plies for the cretw at Fall Creek.| _ SON FOR CONSTANTINOS Mr. and Mrs. Danny Constantino | of Juneau became the parents of a son early this morning at St. Ann Hospital. The child, born at 6:40 a.m., weighed six pounds 15 ounces. | The parents of the new arrival are prominent members of the Filipino| Community. 1 FROM ANCHORAGE Among Anchorage residents stop- ping at the Baranof Hotel are May- or and Mrs. Z, J. Loussac, E. Glen | Wilder, A. R. White, Edward B. Crittendon and Alfred H. Nelson. e o 00 06 0 00 Refie * ! . If you aren’t particular what you eat, you probably have a low "1Q” ... may be vitamia deficient. If you have good dietary habits, yours is doubtless a high “IQ. But, seemingly well-balanced meals can be “vitamin-poor.” Guard against vitamin deficiency D D D . . HERE'S HOW'TO-RATSE YOUR. WITH €273 MULTL-VITAMIN PLENAMI| When Vitamin Daficiéncy Exists VITAMIN A VITAMIN, fptovaid-night " b v !wfle'b\v-mfl- | Pytidoxine (B izafien: of Calcjum/ and Phosphorauy - - pellagid ASCORBIC ACID 'THIAMINE Vikpimin €7\ ol Pribenis ‘tcurvy RIBOFLAYIN Vilamins 82, .G Pravants mm\'elu n 81, fmproves appetiie San Francisco. He is expected to return Sept. 5. He was accompan- ied by Mrs. McLean. home of Mrs. Harold Schultz. At 8 pm.—Elks Club, Elks Hall. Plenamins Each Day Keep Vitomin Deficiency Away Lok . S CAPSULES Butler-Man “The Rexall Store” e e 00 e 0000 k *“INGESTION QUOTIENT” :ts your dictary hablts | — supplement your diet with Rexall Plenamins . . . get all the vitamins for which minimum daily adulc requirements have been established — plus liver con- centrate and iron! X 144 CAPSULES $5.00 LIYER: CONC: LIVER CONCENTRATE {1-20) (1:125) Aidt in prevention of nuiritional - janemia. ro ug Co. August 24 At noon—Juneau Chamber of Com- merce, Baranof Hotel. At 8 p.n.—Special Meeting of 40 et 8, Legion Dugout. 4 At 7:30 pm.—CYO Mescts, Parish| Halil. At 7 p.m.—Meeting of team capts. | Thurs, Night Bowling League and at 8 p.m, practice bowling for teams. Tentative teams on Elks| bowling bulletin board. | August 25 | |for good,. as he kept half hisjAt 7:45 p.m., Catholic parish ladles sewing meeting, Parish Hall. | August 26, Game | 587-1t | Save the Date: Night at Moose Club. with the bases empty for Chicago.; [ Jim Hearn pitched a five-hitter for the Giants. NEW YORK, Aug. 22—P—Yogi| Berra batted in six runs today with| a homer, triple and two singles to pace the runner-up New York Yan- to a 13-6 victory over the| League-leading Detroit Tigers. The Yanks' win put them with 2% games of the Tigers. The teams will | meet here again Wednesday and | Thursday. Johnny Mize and Gene Woodling also clouted homers for New York while Johnny Groth belt- | ed a three-run homer for Detron.,i Chicago at Philadelphia postpon- | WHEN THE RECIPE CALLS FOR VANILLA play safe! Get the vaniila that has been the standard of quality for 69 years. Use SCHILLING 7« VANILLA and taste the difference ed, rain. (Twi-night doubleheader * tomorrow) FROM MT. VIEW Roy and Mable Hendricks, Wilber and Cary Powel ing from Mountain View guests at the Baranof Hotel. | Fares Anchorage Kodiak Homer Naknek A. B. 10% KReduction *Plus Tax Daily Flights — Passengers, Mail and Air Cargo Connections at Anchorage for all Interior and Westward Points DAC1E1C NORTHIER Y 104.50. Naknek Village 114.50. Reduced One Way Round Trip 113.40. 176.40. 144.00. 188.10. 206.10. on Round Trip 63.00. 98.00. 80.00- fruit. son. dispositions. Fine salads or dessert. a .\\% Another S & W Grocers all over the country from comparisons made righ ‘They have seen us open a with any other brand on thei Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 Quality best, every time. 1IRIINES, INC SaW FINE FOODS Only the most luscious Florida beauties are chosen for S_& W Grape=- These plump, ten= der segments ,are packed from prime fruit, picked at the height of the sea- Helps breakfast S & W Grapefruit today! Grocers who know agree: "SW quality is so much better” From their own experience, they have judged S&W This is the coat 1 perfectly tailored coat can for well at home and ab Try Fine Food. have judged for themselves, t in their own stores. nd compare S&W products ir shelves. vvs “so much better” hat spreads its wings, setting you off with flattery and all the poise a give. Shagmoor travels road, because Shagmoor woolen is downy-light yet toasty warm for every winiry climate. And it not only sheds wrinkles, dust and moisture, but repels moths for the lifetime of the coat! Style $530, in misses sizes. 5995 exciting places. . . your TOM GEORGE invites YOU to the C OUNTRY CLUB * k. New Chef KAY WILLIAMS B Seafood . . . Steaks Chicken Dinners Dining . . . Dancing o Shrimp or Crab Cocktail Fried Spring Chicken (Local) 2.50 T-Bone Steak 2.50 T-Bone Steak ¢ (Large) 3.00 _ [ncludes Country Club Salad, Spaghetti, French Fries, Hot Biscuits, Honey, Tea or Coffce A Deluxe Dinners , New York Cut 4.00 Filet Mignon 4.00 Porter House 3.50 Frog Legs . 3.50 Includes Country Club Salad, Spaghetti, French Fries, Hot Biscuits, Honey, Tea or Coffze 50c Seafoods French Fried Prawns Tartar Sauce . 2.50 Broiled Lobster Drawn Butter . 3.00 French Fried Oysters Tartar Sauce . 2.50 Includes Cotintry Club Salad, Italian Spaghetti, French Fries, Hot Biscuits, Honey, Tea or Coffee g Salads Shrimp, Crab or Combination . 2.00 ' Hot Biscuits, Honey, Tea or Coffee PAS Chinese Foods PAY All Kinds of Sandwiches W Have You Tried Our ‘Special Country Club " Breakfasi? 2.00 Jam or Bacon'and Eggs Hot Biscuits, Honey, French Fries sy LIQUOR STORE IN CONNECTION Open All Night # REMEMBER . . . We Are Open All Night . ... WE AIM TO PLEASE! Postuas iy e e e