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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXXVIL, NO. 11,658 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUES SDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1950 MEN IBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CE. Korean Front Pa Downed Firsf Red Je! CANADIAN AIRLINER IN CRASH Fifty-eight Lives Lost, Ma- jority Returning Home from Holy Year ~RFNOBLE. France. Noy. 14 ~—French mountain guides today 1o- | FAIRBANKS IS HIT BY BLIZZARD In Fact Interior Alaska Struck by Raw Wind and Drop in Temperature FATRBANKS, Alaska, Nov. 14— | —An Arctic blizzard struck Fair- Keepmg Ihe Hills Hot e e ! KEY RED TOWN SEIZED; NEAR ZERO BATILE (By Associated Press) U. 8. Marines today seized a key town on the rim of the great Chang- Jjin reservoir, which supplies power |to Chinese Communist Manchuria. A field dispatch said the Marines braving a bitter cold that froze ac- tivity on most of the Korean front, overran Hagaru without opposition. ralyzed By Old Man Winte SOLDIERS TRYING T0 KEED VAR iParka-CIadM—en, Howe Make Advance One Are ~Marines Near Reservo (By the Associated Press) Old Man Winter held the Kol tued tne snatcered wreckage of i banks Sunday night, and by yes. | They seized a quantity of arms and Canadian airliner which apparently | terday had piled up more than " | ammunition. war in his grip today. Near dashed head-on into an alpine| 12 inches of snow in giant drifts | Cold and hungry clvmans in Hag- | Weather paralyzed the front. C cliff with' 51 passengers—mostly | | that blocked roads and snarled | | aru greeted the parka-clad Marines | féspondents said both United Canadian Holy Year pilgrims -and | communciations. | with requests for food. tions and Communist forces mo crew of seven. Snow-bearing winds in excess B | Temperatures of six above zero |SPent their efforts in trying to ki Their first radioed report |ef 50 miles an hour whistled ir {all but paralyzed the main north- | Warm. cated none cf the crash v | from the northwest on the heel: western front, where an estimated | The South Korean Capital Di was likely to be found alive. 4 |of a warm front that had raised 90,000 Chinese Communists face the | Sion beat off a tank-led Commun The guides, pushing toward the g | temperatures to 25 degrees above U's First Corps. But it was even attack on the snow-covered sgene through rain and | zero. | colder on the Marine front in the | €0ast. The South Koreans secus messaged back that they had ted the wreckage n the vertic] north face of Mbunt L'Obicu | The Weather Bureau sald the| | blizzard swept across interior Alas. | ka from northern Siberia. Smoke bursts blossom on enemy North Kcrea, as the U. hill positions north of Hamhung, 8. Marine mortar crews keep a steady | | northeast. The Marines in their northeastern push were told at Hagaru that the their beachhead on the Orangcl river, 90 miles from the Soviet berian border with the help of range, y . Between midnight and 8 am. pressure on the Reds. The Marines were moving steadily toward the main Communist forces pulled out eight inch guns of the U.S. cru The plane crashed last night. yesterday the sncwfall here was big Changjin power dam in this sector. (® Wirephoto. Rochester and rockets of Marl s ! 58 for the north three days ago. Photographs of Pope Pius XII, 9.6 inches and continuing. The all planes. who had blessed the pilgrims shortly before they took off from | Rome and home, yesterday for Faris were found scattered mountain gales. Scraps of a diary written by one | the clouds shrouding the moun- tain. The crash occurred akout 85 mil. es from the spct where an Indian in a; forest seevral miles from the scene of the crash—apparently carried by | | Lt. Russell Bron, ‘ jet fighter pilo hand on his crash heimet combat plane at a Far East air an all-jet dogfight churian border. U. (Nov. 10) t from Pasadena, Calif., rests his as he stands near cockpit of his F-80 base. Lt. Brown is credited with shooting down the first unfriendly jet aircraft in combat during near Sinuiju, on the Korean-Man- S. Air Force Photo via () Wirephoto. iern Hotel rooms, following an in- iquest held this morning in the U. | S. Commisioner’s Court on the death of the children. for 40,000 draftees in January. The new call brings the total Army request to 250,000 since the outbreak of the war in Korea. time 24 hour record of 15.5 inehes was set in January, 1937 Telephone service was disrupt- ed in many districts as lines snap- ped under the heavy weight of snow. The storm hit within an hour {of the time a plane of the U. S. "Axr Force 375th Weather Recon- Ousted CI0's| SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 14—(®— EMERGENCY DECLARED IN group, it was announced. The state of emergency indefinit- | ely suspended civil liberties. The official version of yestc‘- day’s slaying said Delgado and his TELEPHONE STRIKE IS | operators from going to work at a| West Philadelphia exchange. The | Bell workers finally made it with police aid. EXCESS TAX BOOST LOOMS effective as of last July 1. “Business volume and prices rose rapidly after that date as a result of the decision to enlarge our de- Elsewhere there were only nibb at the Communist lines bolstered an estimated 90,080 Chinese quilted uniforms. Soldiers Shiver Many of the Americans still summer-weight uniforms shive as the ice-tipped winds swept do Ll of me} piigrims teld of the audi-| { from mountain peaks. The temper ence with Lhc' Pope and of ze‘m ng | | | naissance Squadron was “talked v E N El EI.A Now RouGH ture was six above Zzero on the Rosary imploring the Me EHQUESF IN DEA'I‘H down” in a ground controlled ap- northeastern front. The U.S. Eigl of Heaven beiore boarding the ! proach (GCAlI landing B§ the end I Army was rushing Arctic cloth plane. | gf WARD (HilDREN Lolie t:eur;})‘utfplé; 375th flight over —_— Siepiaihy to the chilled troops. i | . CARACAS, Venezuela, Nov, 14— H 1 WASHINGTON, Nov. 14— ® — Mines, Booby Traps The C;::il?oluer:nyes‘s?gs:m’rigm th»] M ADEF 1. —'ljhe government decreed a qu”pmen' workers F Igm President Truman asked Congress Communist soldiers resorted wiildes Tald: ~THie Simlale Seems] HH.D HERE IODAV . jaiate. ot amirgaiicy. today aud pres- Wlfll ThOSG GOiflg '0 today to write an excess profits tax | mines and.booby traps to slow SR debtEryea: | New nlon Is 'sed a hunt for all the Bssassins 4 bill at the forthcoming short ses-|the Allled advance but winter T ‘sieabigh b e Sudsiage | :. of acting president Lt. Col. Carlos wofk_Poh(e ca"ed sion to produce an additional $4,- |doing a more effective job. scattered in a mass of fallen earih | The Jury returned a verdict find- Delgado Chalbaud, a member of 000,000,000 a year. | Associated Press Correspond at the foot of the north wall of ng that the two Ward children, the ruling three-man military The President made publi¢ a letter | Don Whitehead said the arrival Mount LiObiou at a spot lookin Phillip, aged 8 and Lawrence, aged Formed rom junta. ; (By the Associated Press) to Rep. Doughton (D-NC), chair-|winter caught American forces pie tigy Mbrarudnds ool ° .4, came to their death as a result The alleged l.’jader of Hyc assas- Striking telephone cqulpment}man of the House Ways and Means | prepared. Ice hung from canvi The guides said they had seen {of a fire of unknown origin on Nov- WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 — (B — | sins, Rafgol Simon Urbina, was workers fought police for 45 minutes | Committee, in which he recom- | water coolers. Fuel oil froze in te! . the wreckage through a break in|€Mber 9 in a blaze in the North- |The Army today announced a call arrested with some members of his today in an attempt to keep Bell | mended that the tax boost be made | stoves. There were more Ameri attired in cottons than in woole ‘Whitehead said. Parka-clad U.S. Marines on tH central front pushed over ice an | fense program greatly, and profits |snow and approached the Changji Constellation plunged into face| The little boys perished in the| The September and Cctober draft | _ fie? 3 Ay P ! Seven strikers were arrested dur- of Mount Bl’;:cg]l:ss Lth’;mc 20| €arly morning fire which swept the | requests were for 50,000 mes in pach;vg::ry olj;:élges“}:lz:‘n.\ 1;09 u‘(;x;é) u:!; ide, Navy Lieut. Carlos Bacalioing the push-and-shove struggle.|have increased as a consequence,” |reservoir. weeks ago, killing 43 East Incian Northern Hotel rooms and the Snake | month. The November figure'cha'rgeS B8 i dnniosiine f were seized by a group of7wice the picketing strikers .burst | the President said. | Farther east, two regiments of th seamen and a crew of five. Al- Pit Bar on lower Franklin Street|mounted to 70,000 and fell to 40,000 ;¢ “thira all-leftist national la- 20 men as they were leaving D*‘] through police lines and prevented | “These profits should obviously|U.S. Seventh Division drove o though French mountain guides |!ast Thursday. for December. B oy hooording-Tlo gado's home. The two weep “‘k““ entrance of the waiting operuwrsvbe taxed as part of a sound pro-|jcy roads in sub-zero weath reached the scene of that crash| Members of the coroner’s jury| All men brought into the service|y. o mancicco Chronicle, "“Q A% abandoned h"“»‘f . ‘}f‘ and other employees. |gram of defense taxation.” against 40-mile an hour winds. . in one of the most hazardous al.|Were Henry Museth, Lloyd Connell, through the Selective Service Sys-| .o newspaper, ‘sald that pur- :}‘: tern s"‘c“‘l’)“ LOflltheb “‘2- whe "1“ A third massed police attempt to High Ground Captured pine feats in history, none of the|Orin Cleveland, G. E. Almquist, Wil- | tem to date have gone to the Army. ! pose was Indicated in Bridges'| ey wer.e rutally beal 'n, l.)l -l force their way through the pick- On the northwest front U8, § gado was shot in the back and)eting succeeded, but it was a pro- bodies has been removed becaus: of the snow and the danger of| liam Passey and Ellis Reynolds. The inquest was conducted by The Navy and Air Force continue call yesterday for a national labor conference in Washington, D. C., Bacalao was critically wounded. tracted struggle to keep the way DIVORCES GRANTED Cavalry captured high ground ol three sides of the walled city d U.|to depend upon volunteers to build - winter avalanclyss. One French (S. Commissioner Gordon Gray. !up their manpwcr Nov. 38, Jolning in the conference bolx\:iee:ls“"::é ‘:z‘;;z‘:l;l:d Clc‘i:?ld l}l‘l‘)i open for employees who sprinted| Yongbyon after a 48-hour battle. guide was killed by an avalanch: | Stanley G. Baskin, Assistant U. S | invitation were nine other left-|ertios from across the street, darting, [ | In the air war two, B-20's we during the climb. | District’ Attorney questioned the (ALASKA FISHERIES wing labor chiefs. Although other unions were in- A dusk-to-dawn clamped on the oil-rich country’ curfew was through the line in groups. Are Knocked Over The hearing of divorce cases oc- |damaged in attack by six Soviel built jet fighters. The Superfort| ONLY PIECES OF BODIES | Witnes«-s Testify vited, viously” directed a Several persons were knocked | | were striking at bridges spanni GRENOBLE, France, Nov. 14—® | Major Eric Newbould of the Sal- to orgt:tflzc:cll]o;i oll))urq(d‘rrmu the :ru,?gg?]ot r:;p;‘,lfi::co:mt:fierm:?f ;::,‘1 over. Buttons were torn from ponce‘c:;:ed‘ thes'lg‘d s ’?Z"M C(;L:;: the Yalo river to prevent furth —The first rescuet reached the | V3tion Army testified that he went BOARD OPENS 3'DAY CIO for alleged Red leanings, the|gaq heaq Drd three—:r\'m ‘militar, | Wniforms and the overcoats of strik- ?hls o:nsomy:] ,:.{_‘e :nel;x]n%%?x hons }Cummunlst, Chinese troops and sup| scene today where a Canadian air- [0 the scene of the fire after hear- | Chromicle said. .}unz; Which “m‘”i “U Coi foTS The policemen, however, did not‘smn 94,1 i“ given over to the plies from reaching Korea. Th . liner crashed against the side of an | i0¢ the alarm and that an elderly SESSION HERE WED The convention iden was DUt|yenesuetn in 1043, hed died of gun. | U5C Mgt sticks. AL e e {B-20's made forced landings ® man told him on the street that a . J The demonstration was the m-gu K.rnpo airfield to get medical ca alpine cliff and reported “nothing left but pieces of bodies” of the 58 passengers and crew. i body lay in room No. 5 in the hotel. ' He said he went to the room No. 5, The Alaska Fisheries Board will forth by Bridges at a New York meeting two weeks ago. His own International Longeshoremen’s and shot wounds. MARRIAGE APPLICATION the CIO Communications Workers Union, to keep non-striking Bell | attempt by the stikers, members o(_ Divorces granted by Judge George | W. Folta were: In the case of Ira B. Stevenson | for injured crewmen. One B-29 raif | off the runway damaging four othe! | planes. d three-day session h to- 0 ion rec d- Most of the 51 passengers were and Wwith fireman Lee Lucas found }open a y ere to- | Warehousemen’s Union recommen John Anthony Pasquan and Car l'vs. Gertrude Stevenson, decree Canadian Holy Year pilgrims home-t'he door which had been almost|morrow morning at 10 o'clock in|ed such action for the “"‘“‘““l,olyn Dee Hyneys ha;“. applied fo workers from going to their jobs. granted to the defendant on @ ward bound from Rome. i demolished by fire, partly ajar. Helthe offices of the Alaska Depart- | protection” of the expelled unions. a marriage license at the offic: The operators and other Bell em- \“(M complaint, ployees are members of independent | unions. The strikers are employed by he Western Electric Company. The rescuer, French army alpine Said they saw a form under the|ment of Fisheries in the Seward| be(ldvn" on the bed and thought|Building. All meetings are open Lol‘ !at the time it to be the body of althe public. !woman. The bed was almost com- C. L. Anderson, director, arrived | \p!et,ely covered by debris which had | yesterday f.fom Washington, D. fallen from the ceiling. C. Ira Rothwell also came in from He said a call was put in for the | Cordova yesterday. Other board Gunvald V. Vallestad from Doris | H. Vallestad. They are both of Petersburg. Bitterness Spreads Barbara Duck from George F. Biterness spread in the nation's | Duck. partial telephone strike after the| Howard M. Engel from Gerald- | of the U. S. Commission FROM SEA’ITLI. P. H. McDonald of Seattle is stop- ping at the Baranof Hotel SEE-SAW RACE FOR MICH. GOVERNOR IS STILL SEE-SAWING (Continued on Page Twe) * The Washlngton VOLCANIC ACTION IN v " g chors ic | huge Bell system struck back at dis- | ine Engel. ‘pohce and for the mortuary car. members due today are Howard D. M. Kantola of Anchorage is 4 ‘ 1 err 0 Oun W, i i . % registered @i the Baranof Hotel. ruptive hit-and-run picketing. Carl Jensen from Opan Jensen. Y Hugh Smith testified he lived akefield, chairman, Port Wake s T Ane steling o Iy azel A. Hops frofh J; Rymona (By iated ) Copyright, 1950, by Bell Syuaicate, Inc.) field; Karl Brunstad, Kodiak; J.| By DREW PEARSON i arl Brunsta odial ‘nearby and went into the Northern Ketchikan; Hotel and saw what he believed to munications Workers of America | Hope. William (CWA) accused the company of Bl The case of Peter Miller vs. Detta | P. Valentine, Walton of Sitka. WARNING TO KIDS G. Mennen Wililams now has i { Michigan’s Democratic Governor | CALIFORNIA (Continued on Page Four) (Commucd on Page Eight) 1 (Continued on Page Two) in room No. ASHINGTON_TMS i th,e ki'nd :15).8 Shox o tho bed The first order of business will Police today issued a warnins "dx?crimmawry l?ckoub" ' come t Miler waa, it e "E‘tl)ll’llz,a:oz vo,fienl:m:inz:er 1251 Gy of column most editors don't like|™ o oo o tne Charles W.|be reports by all members of 1 to children who have been heokine | Plaints to the National Labor Rela- T R e P OPpO M i e write because it's a think.| 3 <t PR RS 9 BERKELEY, Calif. Nov. 14—/®—1 : i tions Board. ® ® o o o o o o o o thestate’s mixed-up election after: me to > | Carter Mortuary testified that he}Fisheries Staff on work accom- ’ | théir sleds on to the rear end o , and they don't pay me to| « AOop seti .| A sharp, four-minute earthquake, They said the company had[‘ o |math. But four counties, including] piece, y . /was called about 8:45 o'clock in|plished since “the muceting last P, four-mi 4 | busses and cars stopping at inter y | that 1 hich Det. is located, « think. They pay me to get the in- | o o morning and removed the bod- | April. presumed caused by voleanic aC- | onpione = aa o0 U reets { tUrned away 15,000 long-distance | WEATHER REPORT o |that in whic| etroit is local side-on cabinet meetings and closed |y ' RS SO0 FERET T 0 Tihe | Thursday will be given over to|tion in the Mount Lassen arca, Was | uyc regeied o fodain g Mayo: | OPerators and maintenance men & Thmperatires for Si-Mour Parioa. o |are sl o be canvasted, And AD gH door sessions, but I get tired al-{p 2 " ' " o e children could |a public hearing on recommenda- |TéPorted last night by the Univer-|pronquopeon o reque sted that the | A€ross the country who would o s e e ki :;fml ‘r(?cnunt S sppeary g DE S legedly crouching under cabinet |, "o “yoopner heing covered |tions for 1951 fishing regulations,|Sity of California seismosraph s8- | signgl lights be turned on tonight | Pledse themselves to work ‘“regu-|® Jo Sunga-Maximum, 236; < | 8.4 A - tables, and being human, I cl.nt‘by the Dbianicets la‘ which a member of the Fish|tion. | Motorists are not to use 9th St.|larly’—that is, be ready to crua&i' minimum, 18. Sl help thinking occasionally. Locked Door and Wildlife staff will be present.| Don Toscher, assistant seiSIO-|nor Go1q gt “except to cross it and | their union’s sporadic picket lines. R s e e e | Recently I've been thinking about | Chief of Police Bernie Hulk tes- |All interested persons are invited | 108ist, ~recorded the quak 851 11 poaathle caution should be used, Complaints Filed o minimum, 12. Ll IAF" S"ll EYEI“G some of the discouraging things . it oo o viewad Louise | to_attend and present their ideas.|6:36:3¢ pm., centered about 200 Ghior Barngrg Fuik said One compitisit was, hed in. Naw |5 u that have been happening in dif-/ ot Bt % o e el where| Friday board members will dis-|Miles from Berkeley, probably near York and the other in Philadelphia. | ® FORECAST of pRESIDENI’lS R A E ferent parts of Lhedworld.w;nc‘h ;\\c Jepeos pat‘ient e thfit Uhe told | cuss specific recommendations to Moum‘ Lassen, the only active “:1; i NLRB officials said it would v.ake*: (Jupeau and Vielnity) :‘ have lost sight of during elections. | . < ‘ .+ | be made to FWS. The 1951-52 bud. | €8N0 in continental United States. at least two weeks to decide the| 1 Lahe a0, been. thalNDe 0 “mt‘:;Th:ll‘:ilglr]:nkzzdke‘:c G Z:c Wil be disoussed as well as| Lassen, 10,577 feet hizh, was STOCK QUOTATIONS matter, with at least 10 days more to |® Fair tonight and Wednes- I“ 1952 Elf(“fl“ cheapest of all pastimes—thinking oo { i > _|suggested legislation to be pre-|Once believed extinct. I crupt- _— get a court injunction if the union|® day. Northeast gusty winds e ahout what I would do if I were|from going ";;“ ";““ room. He tes-| 0 the forthcoming session |©d, however, in 1941, and sincé | NEW YORK, Nov. 14—P—Closing | charges were upheld. ® decreasing tonight. Lowest e | — running the country. T've even got fifled she said that tbere was i/ /N0 S orial legislature, 1f |then has been the scene of hund: |quotation of Alaska Juneau mine| Bell called the lockout charge|® temperature tonight about 20 e (By Associated Press) two ideas to propose to make lock on the e e door PUSLTE i neccssary the meeting will|Tds of explosions of sian and |stock today s 21, American Can|eabsurd” and said it was only try-|® In Juneau and as low as 10 | The Senator known as “Mr. Re- things better and am almost temp- | that often the Ghifecn Gmot tof i 0T Saturday, Anderson | 8sh- {100, American Tel and Tel 151%,|ing to line up a reliable working|® In outlyng areas. Highest ®|publican,” Robert Taft of Ohio has ted to write a letter to Harry Tru- loc (; - f;m'lw"r gze chid lD"ck' sabt: e 2 Anaconda 367%, Douglas Aircraft 83, | force to handie the emergency. |® Wednesday near 24. ® |something in his eye. It's what is o ¢ L‘;“,i frr:nmmthf‘ et — S]’E‘MER MOVEMENTS General Electric 497, General| while tension mounted on the|® ® |known as the presidential gleam. First, however, here are some of X B- thold emfier of the Ju- | | Motors 49, Goodyear 60"/, Kennecott picket lines, negotiators for bozh,‘ e PRECIPITATION e He hastold a Washington news eon- the things happening in Europe Phil I erDm ‘m 67l B i STORK CALLS TWICE Princess Louise from Va r,uvcr'sgs,;‘. Libby, MeNeill and Libby 8%, | sides met in New York in compara- | @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today ® | fernce that while he will not cam- that haven't hit the headlines and neau Fire Departwent, ¢ U7 BFC| A tenpound boy was born to|scheduled to arrive at 7:30 10¢ht | Northern Pacific 27, Standard Oil | tive harmony last night for a seven | ® City of Juneau—None; ® paign for that top 1952 political which we have missed because we fireman }.zo'v Car‘nsafiha‘:n twrios by‘Mr, and Mrs. Jake Cropley, Jr.|and sails for Skagway of California 78, Twenticth Century | and one-half hour session — the|® Since Nov. 1—399 inches; e |nomination, he would accept it if have been so absorbed in the late Thorpe pee ‘t‘;”-e gl mz at St. Ann’s Hospital at 8 p.m.|o'clock. Fox 21%, U. 8. Steel 40" longest, since the strike began last|® Since July 1—83.02 inches. @it comes his way. pattle to control the west bank of flames before ‘ey with the fire Yesterday. Baranof scheduled to suil [fOM| Sales today were 1680000 shares. | Thursday morning ® At Airporty-None; ® | Taft preceded this with the claim 18 <JPgunan, oD O e o they directed the hose A Eirl Was born to Mr. and Mrs. | Seattle Friday. Averhges today are as f0llows: in-| rhe talks will continue today. |® Since Nov. 1—195 inches; @ that he alone among Republicans In Italy, a country which we hose. He said they Eugene Prancis at 5:55 pm. She| Denali from west is schedulcd t0| dustrials 22052, rails 6811, utilities = 777 le since July 1—23 inches. © has shown that he can carry labop weighed 7 pounds 7 ounces. ‘safl south Sunday a.m. .4080 ® 9 9 9 % 9 9 0 0 0 \s[rongholds, P