The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 5, 1951, Page 2

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PAGE TWO LICENSING OF | tended if, due to Alaska's great distance, the Welfare Department is not able to make the necessary (H lD (ARE HOMES | visits to each home and issue the | actual license before expiration date of the first permit. ls w REOU!RED There is no fee for the permit or . the license and application for a R 5 temporary permit should be made Temporary permits for child care immediately by persons operating have been mailed to the 27 (inl«l-lxuu-r homes, nurseries, or day care ren's institutions in the Territory|centers for children, if they have in compliance with the new licen- not already received one, Mr. Har- sing law passed by the 1951 Terri-| mon said torial Legislature, Henry A. Har- mon, Director of the Public Wel- Harmon Asks for Comments fare Department said today These applications should be maae "The law, which became effective | (o the Department of Public Wel-| licensing my May 15, provides for the and supervision of boardi e, Box 2781, Juneal Welfare workers at Ketchikan, by ana foster homes, nurseries wge, Seward, Fairk tutions caring for one or Nome will be glad to expiain pro- children under 16 years of age, N0, yione of the new licensing law to related by blood or marriage 0] anyone interested, Mr. Harmon the foster parents id, and also commen's and-in- Wel ets Standards quiries will be welcomed at the It designates the Welfare Depart- | Territorial office in Juneau. ment as the agency responsible for| * .wppe Jicensing law is not d led to hamper or close any child= standards for the care of children who for one reason or an-|yers homes giving good child care, - setting means any establishment providing regular care for less than six chil- dren not related by blood or mar- riage to the foster parents.” | “‘Nursery” means any establish- ment providing care and services for any part of the twenty-four hour day for any child not related by blood or marriage to the owners or operators.” “Institution” means any estab- lishment providing regular care and services for six or more child- ren not related by blood or mar- riaze to the ownefs or operators. AIRATTACKON MANCHURIA WAS BLOCKED other are deprived of the )n.\xllg’r}nl_ r is it to prevent the opening| and ! of living in their own home Lo new qualified children’s for issuing licenses, Mr. Harmon ex Mr. Harmon emphasized, plained adding that: “Every encouragement The lay also provides that & .n4 gupport will be wiven to the temporary permit be issued to al persons op institutions already €ar-| yovelopment of new chily care ing for children at the time the| ..o 1951 Act .was passed. This provis- | lh’(" WU;qrm I‘)' ",“‘;“("‘: ;' “vu x| in carrying out the respousibilitie: 4 sk Y1 aim of the Welfare Department ic regulations for their operation, Mr. $ i : | cooperate with the home: in Harmon said, and to make the vis- i e ey its nece: ry before issuance ol the Drovifg Bua NI the, Hisnse ud < : | d s of child care throughout the . Territory.” : 15 Mr. Harmon stated that the Li- censing law defines homes. caring are ef-|.or children and coming under pro- the dir-| visions of the Act, as follows: and to thr fa homes now operating children of Alaska need home car Permits Good to Nov. The temporary permits fective until November 15 “ ‘Boarding home or. foster home” | because the “hot pursuit” doctrine (Continued from Page One} pelling enemy aircraft engaged in offensive missions into Korea. “We believe this would be a mini- mum reaction to extreme provoca- tion, would not itself affect ad- versely the attitude of the enemy to- ward Korean operations, would serve as a warning, and would add greatly 50 the morale of UN pilots who are now prevented from taking min- imum defense measures and for whom 'in oase of bomber pilots it is impossible under existing conditions to provide adequate air cover.” The telegram asked the embassies to advise the reaction df the other zovernments but said the United States was not asking “concurrence” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA “_would turn upon military neces- sity and elementary principles of self-defense.” Demilitarized Zone Acheson also testified that Gen. MacArthur disapproved lagt Novem- ber a proposal for a demMitarized zone on border. Acheson told ‘senators that tpe British, others had suggested such ‘a.zone: This was before the Red Chinese entered the war in force. Acheson said the thought was that the zone would make it clear there was no aggressive intention by UN forces against Red China. The secretary said MacArthur dida't think the suggestion was a good one and disapproved it. Armistice Up To UN Acheson said the United States will consult the UN before making any armistice in Korea. He held to this stand despite insistence from a Democratic senator that this coun- try should be free to act on its own. Senator Gillette tangled sharply with Acheson both on the question of an armistice and on President Truman’s right in the first place to send U. S. troops to Korea without congressional approval. Under Gillette’s questions, Ache- | son said the U. 8. commander in the field has the right to “bring about an armistice.” But he said other UN members would be con- sulted. Gillette’s Repudiation Gillette said he doesn’t agree that liz necessary. “I may say that I:deplore your interpretation and repudiate it per- sonally,” he told Acheson. * It was Acheson’s fourth day and the hearing was cut short so the ector poibted out, but may be ex- : Famous Manufacturers join Behrends i bringing you the LateSr i SpoPr SHIfs. JANTZEN - McGREGOR WILSON BROS. - ARROW STRADIVARI First Choice in Comfort and Color Rayons, nylons, cottons, gabardines in splendid solid tones and happy go lucky prints Long sleeved models — many with convertible collars. the Korean-Manchurian | French, Canadians and' TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1951 committee members could attend a ISenmr‘ session Acheson’s Points | | During his two hours of testimony today, Acheson told the senators: 1. The United States counts on { convincing other UN members that { the “Communists cannot shoot their | '(way" into the U. N, rather than { tiguring on a veto to keep Red Chins out of the international organiza- tion. 2. He thinks Russia had “com- plete domination” over the govern- ment of North Korea. He said: “It certainly ied that army, and it !was an offensive army, armed for | offense.” i 3. The bombing of Manchuria in | his opinion “would have much more jof a tendency to bring on a gen- eral enlargement of hostilities” than i freeipg Chinese Nationalist troops { on Formosa to attack the mainland of China. (MDR. CHESTER " HONOR GUEST AT - FAREWELL DINNER | 6.2 ! @ov. and Mrs. Ernest Gruening are entertaining at dinner tonight Ito honor Comdr. E. P. Chester who | is flying south tomorrow enroute to | Boston, Mass., where he has beer | assigned commander of the Coast Guard, vessel Dexter. { At 11:30 this morning Comdr | Chester was officially relieved of his duties as aide to Gov. Gruening and Comdr. Don Morrison assumed that station on collateral duty. Comdr. Morrison’s primary duty will continue to be Engineer Of- | ficer of the 17th Coast Guard dis- trict. Comdr. Chester and his family have been in Juneau the past four years and have made many friends who regret their departure. They {have taken an active part in civic land social life in the community. Mrs. Chester and son, Fred, are al- ready on the east coast. They are visiting relatives at New London, Conn., awaiting the commander’s | arrival. MONEL PRISON CAUGHT, CALF. REDDING, Calif., June 5 —®— An armed man who was wounded Sunday (when he refused to submit | to an officer's questioning was iden- | tified today as Henry Clay Tollett, fugitive|from McNeil Island Federal prison and one of the FBI's 10 most wante® men. g He had been identified originally | as Lewis Basham, 33, of Stringtown, Okla. The FBI said Tollett escaped Nov. 22, 1949, from McNeil prison, where! he was sentenced to 25 years for bank robberies at Sweet Home, Ore., and Lebanon, Ore., in 1946. He still was listed in critical con- dition in Shasta County hospital from stomach and back wounds from a bullet fired by State High- way Patrolman Jim Lane. Lane said he fired at Tollett when the man pulled a gun, refused to drop it and started to flee while Lane was questioning him and a companion Charles Hammers Maxim Y £33 reulm‘_w}y a-unanimous decision over thws a right cress at Joey Maxim (left), lightheavy- Ezzard Charles (right), heavyweight champion, throeight title bout in Chicago Stadium, Chicago. Ezzard weight champ, during second round of their heavywe challenger. ? Wirephoto. Okla. He was booked at county jail on a charge of carrying concealed weapons. Tollett escaped from McNeil Is- land apparently by hiding in a crate of furniture that was trucked from the prison. Now 56, Tollett's record goes back nearly 30 years to his native Okla- homa where he served a number of terms on varying charges, UNEMPLOYMENT DROPPED IN MAY T0 SMALL TOTAL WASHINGTON, Ju;le 5 — 1 — Unemployment dropped in May tc 1,602,000 — the smallest total since World War II ended in August, 1345 The census bureau reported today that level was reached after a 137,- 000 decline in the number of jobless between April and May. The number of employad civilians meanwhile jumped 1,148,000 in May to 61,193,000, highest in six menths. The upswing in job openings brought 1,014,000 additional persons into the labor force last month. The great majority of the new jobs — 795,000 —op=ned up in farm- ing rather than' defense attiviti however, the season of spring planting and cultivating work came on. | BIG MEETING IS BLOCKED BY SOVIETS on the edge of Redding Sunday. The companion was named ac Red Wilson Fletcher, 36, Muskogee, SCOTLAND TLED IN THE UNIT ILLED IN GO0 iTED KIl GoveRnment SUPERVISO BLENDED SCOTS WHISKY ¢ 868 PROOF RENFIELD_MPORTERS, (7D, NEW YORK WASHINGTON, June 5 — (P — Russia’s insistence on discussing the North Atlantic Treaty and Ameri- F5 can bases overseas apparently has all but killed off chances for a Big Four foreign ministers meeting in Washington. Diplomatic officials generally agreed that is the effect of the Soviet reply Monday to an Ameri- can invitation for the British, French and Russian ministers to meet here with Secretary Acheson July 23, It seems equally certain, however, that diplomatic negotiations in Paris and among the four capitals will continue for awhile longer. There ys a slight possibility at least that a major change in posi- tion by one side or the other would once more open the way for a min- sters’ session Deputies of the Big Four have been meeting in Paris more than three months. A long series of re- latively minor concessions, alm entirely by the Western powers, had advanced very little the efforts to arrive at a ministers’ agenda. RESEARCH WORK ON | REINDEER GRAZING Dr. Herbert C. Hanson, research professor in biology at The Catho- lic University of North America, Washington, D. C., has left for northwest Alaska where he will| study reindeer grazing areas with| special reference to winter range. He goes from here to Nome and will work out of there in his re-| search studies. Dr. Hanson has spent two summers in similar work in western Alaska. He was general manager of the Alaska Rural Re- habilitation Corporation for the Matanuska Valley during 1940 a:td] 1945, Dr. Hanson will conclude his sum- mer’s work in September. Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Johnsan; of Kake are stopping at tle Baran- of Hotel. AR R PRI IR RRRRIRRRRRRR TR R FERRRRRRGFRRRTR There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! AR AR AR AR R R AR R R AR R AR R R AR R AR R R R AR R RRERE IR B RR IR R RRRRARRRRRRRRRRRE R ——‘ KRRORFRR Big, isn’t she? Twenty-seven thousand; one hundred tons of fight- ing steel! But this aircraft carrier is only a light- weight compated to some of the towering dread- naughts that make the U.S. Navy the mightiest in the world. Your navy is in there slugging every minute, doing its job to defend you and all of the things you hold dear. % But remember, defense is your job, too! And one of the best ways to do your job is to buy U. S. De- fense* Bonds. You’ll be helping your country and at the same time you’ll be making the soundest in- vestment on earth today. For U. S. Defense Bonds are as safe as America! . The U. S. Defense Bonds you buy give you petsonal financial independence Remember that when you're buying Defense Bonds you’re building a personal reserve of savings. Money that will some day buy you a house, or educate your children, or supgo’rt you when you retire. Remember, too, tha if you don’t save regularly, you don’t save at all. So go to your company’s pay office—now— and sign up for regular Defense Bond purchases through the Payroll Savings Plan. In this plan, you may save as little as $1.25—or as much as you want—each week. If you can save just $7.50 weekly, in teri years you’ll have bonds woxfth $4,329.02 cash! You’ll be helping protect America —and helping your dreams come true. #U. S. SAVINGS BONDS ARE DEFENSE BONDS BUY THEM REGULARLY! _The U. S. Government does not pay for this advertising. The Treasury Department . thanks, for their patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and The Daily Alaska Empire ST BPEHT - P

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