The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 21, 1951, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Col. Landreth Talks |U.S. Must Keep Large Bench-Warmer THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA oA : TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1951 * * & Stock Quofations |Jet Plane Kills Hospifal Nofes Scrufiny of Pearl Harbor nionens “were e 5. Forecasting Ring Scheduled | Monday were Henrietta Jan | Mrs. John A. Curtis, Archie Be | dismissed were Mrs. Herbert Aug. 21—(P- | ski, Mrs. George Fox, Mrs. Harold |1 fabulous success story of a (Continued from Page One) By the Associated Press Fennel and baby girl. ar Red spy ring was prom- e | Born at St. Ann's Hospital ed the closest scrutiny today by Dale Mitchell, a bench warmer | Mrs, William Rhymer at 11:4 investigators. test. every spring, is one of the leading |am. Monday, a girl weighing he was lights in Cleveland's stirring drive pounds 14 ounces. ard Sorge, chief of the ring | dard Oil of California 49, Twentieth for the American League pennant.| Admitted to the | the gallows in 1944, He sai - | Century Fox 20%, U. S. Steel 63, Mitchel, “:0 :fh' never failed lm‘flnspi:m Monday were Min: | identified w Pound $280, Canadian Exchange hit 300 in the big top, sits on the |Howard, James Jackson, Regir Vaatartiiy W 8 now des 4.621%. sidelines down south while rookies |James, all of Juneau: Beve 5 “1“7““‘»‘[;“‘?-‘&;} \igl\i-“}n::;:\'h" |;“‘: “,013 Sales today were 140,000 shares. | TWenty-one other. soldiers were I battle for his left field job. But|Bennett, Charles Bennett, Delor G T IR or the other alleged | Averages today were as follows: | Purned or injured as the T-33 air Mitchell doesn’t worry. “T'll be in | johnson, of Hoonah; Naomi Kar | membe industrials 26530, rails 80.03, util- | force trainer plane, crashed | there before long,” is his comment. [csh of Angoon. There were ! Ser (R-Mich), 2 |jties 44.93. ments after taking off from near- 4 Mitchell reached the 300 mark 11\’d;_,.n15>31,, told by McGuire Air Base. The planc's s Juneau, he heads homeward Aug.|batting last night as the Indians - HERE | PREROAEN ey d dn- the 2. opened crucial 18-game home wreckage. stand by beating the Washington | An Alaska Coastal Airline plane e | brought Mrs. Helen Davis of Pel to Juneau this afternoon. Mrs. Davis | a multiple fracture of the left 1sported on a stret- taken immediately | Tt Bertram Brinley, Hospital. No further | public information office vailable at presstime. | hlazing wing-tip fuel tank, appar- ently jarred loose by trees, drop- | ped onto the truck, turning it and regist- | its passengers into flaming tor- ! ches. NEW YORK, Aug. 21—®—Clos- ing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 27, American carl Harbor disas- | Can 116, American Tel. and Tel. ter that Japan would attack |161%, Anaconda 45%, Douglas Air- | the United States. craft 52, General Electric 59%, Gen- The lean, spectacled witness, hu‘uu Motors 49%, Goodyear 93'%,|A tified through an interpr | Kennecott 767, Libby, McNeil and | the prosecutor who sent Rich- \Ll!)b\ 9, Northern Pacific 47%, Stan- | 13, Injures 21 in Flaming Crash FORT DIX, N. J., Aug. 21- flame-enveloped jet plane — ° raining fiery death as it fought a losing battle for altitude — plowed into a group of soldiers yesterday. Thirteen men, including twin " brothers, were killed Armies Overseas, Says \Dewey; Is for Statehood Finally Arrived On Civil Defense Mitchell's Day At Rolary Club Col. Earl director gular club noon. utlined the on the WASHINGTON, % before the Landreth, territorial civil defense, spoke at meeting of the Juncau at the Baranof Ho- night guest at the Governor's Mansion. Dewey story, first told in February, involves a Communist op- eration which included three Am- ording to testimony tary i declined in Seattle to answer any questions on his po- terrs- | litical future. He said his major ;| ambition is to help weld a strong | | civil Govern! federal, local levels and I 1s of each. He t likely that an atomic drop on Juneau but | bably be a tar- mework ericans, a rial and o revealed two foreign policy that will cement but never nations of the world After a week’s tour of the Ter- ritory, to include Ketchikan, F: } ex- | banks and Anchorage as well | the* free oy tor Ferguson nese investigator, told the Sen- |member of the subcommiliee ate’s Intermal Security subcom- |a reporter mittee the Tokyo-based spyring |be fully expl able to tell Moscow weeks | ings. ¢ bombs and will | WOMAN BROUGHT “If anything happens, we'll be | | DICK LEWIS IS apt to be in the middle of it up here in Alaska,” Landreth . the mporsane {John McCormicks was ok e a ball of fir skimmed over i with soldiers 50 feet away. Survivo down on them * through the tre a truck partly-l1 and crashed about plane ‘\lSlTlNG HERE PUBLISHER IS HERE The triumph, a 43rd birthday | g F (Dick) Lewis, owner 6f Thioman .0 Tuaton 38100 West g for manager Al LoPez, - | juneau water system, from iblishin of Ann Arbor, Mich., | 1 W- Darby of tI abled the Tribe to pull one game | p..noiseo, Calif., is visiting h AT Hived e 5 Irum.Anv h- | Service from Wast ahead of the runnerup New Y‘”kllnr a few days. He first arrived orage on PNA is ‘lu[‘)pm“ ot | Tegistered at the Ga Yankees, who divided a twi-night | i juneau aboard the 8. 8. City of | (e Gastineat oy doubleheader with the Tigers in qopeka with a group of tourist SR RO Detroit. The Tigers won the Opener, | i 1890 and decided to stay, he said 3, but the Yanks grabbed the sec- ‘He has. ot made ¥ Hoe here ond;* 13-0: | for the past 40 years but returns for The remaining American League | yigieg, clubs were not scheduled. In the the | National League, rain washed mn.j a game belween the Brooklyn | Dodgers and the Braves at Boston. | The other National League clubs | were idle. ' | | i FOREST S. Forestry gton, D. C, is e reau Hotel. an Hotel, Fort Dix jon regardin, said a NP to St. Ann's VISITORS FROM CALIFORNIA | details wer: Mrs, Frances M. Hanover and Mrs. Marilla Martin, at the | R Calif., are staying at Baranof Hotel. John McCormick evening at Gen inta the FROM TENAKEE L. A. Ha of Tenakee, {s ered at the Ht)HI Juneau both ¢ ome colored Don V. Davis of Seattle i: Baranof Hotel STEVENS COTTON SHOP presents: —The amazmgly different ,..M“ 3 FURNITURE WORKSHOP PLANNED IN OCTOBER - ""l - i a the navy No matter what brand or what price girdle &c-. you now wear, here’s EXCITING NEWS! | | | i | [ | He’s the smartest boy in school..,and his Mommy’s plenty smart, too. She knows our ex- pert, high quality drycleaning makes the whole family’s clothes spark'e like new. Keeps them looking bright and fresh. Let us help your children be the brightest in their class i for better appearance PHONE 507 TRIANGLE CLEANERS “Cravenette Headquarters” on Pan American * Regular scheduled service * Big 4-engine planes ¢ Good food Hostess hospitality * Low fares « 18 years’ experience flying in Alaska * Daily flights to Ketchikan and Seattle Two flights weekly to Nome, Fairbanks, tehorse For reservations, call Baranof Hotel, Juneav Phone 106 LUN AHERICAN | WOILI"S MOST EXPERIENCAD AIRLING e being well org i levels to cope “.(»Enteriam 35 af hortly after the opening of school. A vote favored an evening Mr. and Mr ing with wives attendir were hosts Sunday entertainment such a buffet dinr honoring Brig slide | Richard K. Mellon Paul S. Swensson, Seattle mon-| General Mellon, member of umental distributor, was a Visit- | nationally known Mellon | family, ing Rotarian. Other guests were|was formerly director of Selective Lt. Col. J. D. Flewelling of the | S teaii b engineering division of Alaska| Thirty-five guests were enter- Communications System and Johr 1| tained, among whom were Cather- Dunn, Juneau attorney |ine Rochlitzer and Emily Elling e of Spokane, Wash, Mrs. Graham J. Graham of Bloomfield Hills, H b H | Mich., and Capt. O. 8. Wagner of MOI‘III( ubmarine | the Seattle regional office of Se-| A furniture workshop will be held | | lective Service. in Juneau early in October, Miss Confract Awarded |, ... Hallene Price, Univerity of Al-| FOREST FIRE ska extension agent, announced to- | % _p— | PROTECTION IN | WAS}HNGT(?N‘I ‘Aim'. "ll n:, - | ALASKA STUDIED Instructor for the course will be | a/ e A R Than | Miss Mary Robinson, University ex- | :‘ powered submarine has m.l“‘ Fire protection for Alaska’s for-i#ension housing specialist. Anyone | RIC NEXT e shhouRGsinent gave no’ de= | T yiod i Bt ¢ Room 3 in the Shattuck Building. tails. The fact that a formal con-| p. i jonn Shanklin, chief for-| e tract has been let, however, pre-| oger of that agency in Washing- | sumably indicates the project was ! on D, C. BR'GHTEST advanced to a point where the; 'y g yisited Anchorage and | ° ey :led’b“’““de“" “L "::;ll‘l':""iF:m-mmk\. and will stop in Jun owered submarine can be Veau o few dsse Ditere velinaths PAn’ informal Tepcrt to Congress | g0 "yt “l“”“:' 8 by returning KID IN last February said great progress| I toward such a submarine had been | R s made in experimental work | 3 scHool Boys Inferested ' In Scouting Invited fo Meet | An open house for all boys over | 10 year of age, who have not joined a Boy Scout troop will be held to-| morrow evening at 7:30 o'clock at the Am Legion Dugout. Fred Ross, repnnm for LP-‘mn-.puxmuml Troop 613, announced today. All Cub Scouts are asked to be'in uniform, Ross said. Ray Wells, as- | sistant leader, will give advice on! scouting and a moving picture “Pin- | nochico” will be shown. There will be refreshments and the meeting will close with Scouting ceremonies. TAKEN TO KETCHIKAN U. S. Coast Guard ,headquarters reported this morning that C. A. Eberhardt, 55, had been taken b,\" a Coast Guard plane from Kaigani Harbor to Ketchikan, arriving there early this morning. Eberhadt was | taken ill aboard the fishing vessel Tyke and was said to be suffering | with a high fever and unable to | stand up. Dr. J. O. Rude of Juneau furnished medical advice for his care umxl he could bz- hm]malmd No other girdle can match the superb comfort, the fabulous figure-, slimming power of the new PLAYTEX FAB-LINED GIRDLE! 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