The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 31, 1951, Page 6

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PAGE SIX W& THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA i FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1951 Special Milif Catholic Women i Price Office R \Planes Zoom fo 4-H i SALESMAN GOES SOUTH pecial Milifary ' in Cove | rice Office Raps |Planes Zoom fo 4-Hour Aflanfic Record, |Bad Check Charge P e b 9 quip- sllrvey Committee Blast Majoretfes New Mutfon (hop 1 Mi Nets Oregon Man ment and bullding materials sales- ‘14 2 Mlles up a' I,3m M"es per Hour . i man from Seattle, stopped over in Enf lII 'o AI ska "Undress’ Cosfumes ews o es S I d P I 4 Months in Jail Juneau yesterday after a month's ouie d es an rices ALDERGROVE AIR FIELD# tglp "“0“82 the Interior. He report- ed a great demand for buildin, - ‘ WASHINGTON, Aug. 31—#—Bad| PITTSBURGH, Aug. 31—P—Del- By Hazel Wimer | waASHINGTON, A, S| North Ireland, Aug. 31| was made Aug. 15 from Edwards by sodtem, Ore. man pleaded 8Ul- | terials - throughout the Territory, | oo Weiington and| C¥ates to_the national Catholic| by rre Govm (pecial to The| EOvernment moved todsy to cut|ish twin-jet bomber com 2 eorit~| Air Force base. The exact altitude & aiesterday In CoMmMISSIONeYs | He left today for his Seattle head- < ol o e A e Bt ]\:lo‘n{:wn,\ [;:rlsni adopgted n? m]mé Empire) Bobby Murphy x'eturned\bM‘k the prices charged on lamb| trans-Atlantic hop fromp;relang tenches, I3 k0ntiotiins. e MU0 [t mout o flS?Oem il th.e b oo e S 1ok & wisvey of ram meajorettes - appearing at| t0_the Cove from Juneau for the| and mutton by dealers who offer| to Newfoundland foday in a rec- Bill Bridgeman, was not disclosed.| 'me 15 Cleo C. Martin. According & Alaska's military’ Eonstct Hion pro- | public functions. durktion of hisiysektion. : Bobhy | ASW or UDUSUBL CUSVISSKEERERRSM | ord-siBSLINE. ToUt - HAHTS A (48 The lofficially-recoghized World | to Acting U. §. Marshal Walter ALASKA > el A g X The resolution said the trend to|S2Ys that high school starts the 8t overceiling prices. minutes. altitude record is 72,395 feet,. s>t | Hellan, Martin came to Alaska THE Lk o e had planned to take off | disrezard modesty and decency of day after Labor Day and he must| The Office of Price Stabilization| The flight beat the previous| ' 1935 by two balloonists, Army | about six weeks ago. ze (3 The group had planned to take o deat ; be in Juneau a few days before |called this practice “an evasion of | time of four hours and 37 min. | Capts. Albert W. Stevens and Or-| mpe o, 9 | s | 3 for Great Falls early this morning. | attire is becoming bolder every| g, o ¢po ! the general ceiling price " ? ANCville A, Andemon, The OMIBIALlY | g s s diswn. on the T ) It now plans to leave Washington | year. It added: s the house-guest of Mr. and | L g P! regula- | ytes, but it lost the race westward end tecord is 670981 | First National Bank here and was - ' 3 “ _ As Mrs. E. O. Swanson. tion. with the sun, which makes the accepted speed record is 670.981| ... tonight. we utterly condemn the OPS sald 1ts order Shout Bl Mob. set in 1048 by & North Am. | c3shed at the Baranof Hotel Aug. & AND The group was scheduled to stay| dress or undress and indecent con- — S said its order should bring | sying in three and a helf hours at TLP- set W 08 BV & AM-| 15, Authorities said he had no ac- | NS in Great Falls tonight and to reach | tortions in parades and public ex-} THe geine bost ARB. 5ooame] Toll back of BEeet SERERM (o rate,of (B00-fulles S BHES cl]:c:nuF-B(_» ’lrfe aCCP}z‘wd‘ p;low"l: O . ALASKA X=1in the Cove for supplies August 5| in the New York OCity area | The jet bomber's non-stopflight | dircraft altitude record is. 994%| ~Gommissioner Gordon Gray sen- = Anchcrage tomorrow afternoon. able to make the trip because of business in his home district. hibitions of so-called ‘majorettes. Red Rail Lines Passengers to Juneau Aug. 4 on| Alaska Coastal was Mrs. Arthur| Enson off the boat Olympic. i vl g L] which «)insumes approximately half of the nation’s supply of lamb and mutton. Lamb and mutton constitute about four per cent of the coun- of 207279 miles ended in New-| € foundland at 11:45 am., EST. The sleek Canberra jet with its|?® crew of three had taken off at} 12:23 p.m., Greenwich time 11:23 eet, set March 23, 1948, by Vampire jet. ish test pilot John Cunninghem in Brit- | | | | | | tenced Martin to serve four months in federal jail. Stanley Bas- kin, assistant U. S. district attor- ney, handled the prosecution. JAMES BOGGS IS LOST )":h_v cnyn:nlt|lcF will split at An- To VIadWO“Ok Mrs. Laura Witton is here from |try’s total meat supply. am. Juneau time. (cl r{rwb mkn wo sjr?(upstur visits Seattle visiting her sister Mrs.| OPS ruled that only cute sold TIDE TABLE ]\?flm:; al:m:fl godm i ig Dolu.a, (u'b Air For(e Marguerite Butts. Mrs. Witton | during the general price ‘reeze 4 James Boggs was lost overboard o Nakues o Jnrrnv\. I”or_m'. Scw(; y plans a two weeks visit just miss- | period—last Dec. 19 through Jan.! EL SEGUNDO, Calif., Aug. 31— near Ketchikan from the fishing ves- P“SEI‘ger se"lce skn‘ i hittier, Juneau, Haines an ing her sister, Helen Pride, whn;25*"‘fly be offered for sale be-| !®—A navy rocket-powered airplane | ® ® sel Lance Corporal yesterday after- il g WASHINGTON, Aug. 31 — (P —| jeft Jast Tuesday. ginning Sept. 5. bas shattered all altitude records, | e SEPTEMBER 1 ® noon, it was reported here to the| SOUTHBOUND it make a stopover at Seattle. | The Air Force said today that rail 5 The agency said prices on new|climbing to what aviation experts e o | U. S Coast Guard. J. D. Mutch of | mfls - Ras it ;;_t:z:\s”fmm the 10-day | jines from Red Korea to the Rus-| Barney Meyers on his boat Odd|cuts “have been substantially out unofficially believe was 77,674 feet| ® High tide 1:36 am. 169 ft. ® | Juneau is owner-master of the ves-| S.S. BARANOF S.S. DENALI mféed 9& II cv‘flt “'D>W“«Sh';x' sian military base at Viadivostok | will be fishing again soon after|of line with general prices for lamb| (more than 14} miles). It levelled | ® Low tide 7:55a.m. -12 ft. @ | sel. The cutter White Holly from| Sun. Sept. 2 Fri. Sept. 7 fended the invitation yesterday.| were cut by the bombing of Resh- | being tied up the past two weeks|snd mution cuts” AR offlcisl wid off at 1300 miiles an hour. e High tide 2:12 pm. 166 ft. ® Kgetchikan is aiding in the search| . i weld be accepted “if | in, 1 miles from the Soviet bor- | with engine trouble. lin one instance the price on @ new| The supersonic flight in the|e Low tide 8:08 pm. 111t e for the missing men, headquarters tetchikan Petershurg e der, Saturday. ki | cut was 13 cents a pound above|needle-nose Douglas skyrocketship/ @ ¢ o o o o o o o o o | said 2 Seattle Ketchikan 120 An Air Force t:l)"kl:m““d 5‘}“’ Mr. Melvin Grimsrud received a|what the lamb normally would )" e - e 2 Seattle preliminary reports indicated also| picture of his youn have sold for. B 7 o 2 h i s g daughter | have s or. " - e N 4 “es under that all rail and road communi-(gaturday. The picture was taken | SITKA, 1CY STRAITS~ AND R NORTHBOUND M cations south of Rashin (Najin on|through the window of the nur- ‘SK ) TN CHATHAM STRAITS POINTS Su"ey 'or Add"lon some maps) weré put out of oper-| sery at the hospital. .le"efson-]i(kson & 2 PPk 3 N S.S. ALEUTIAN S.8. ALASKA 3 | TAL"ATRLINES ] E3 . . 5 To City of Fairbanks |- =vmows e e o ot o) & o sman—on s e COAS . (eoat[so[siTaa] | MonSepts sat Seot.s g Y anks L ey august of | min x returnea trom Graves| CIUD 10 Eledt 008 3009, NEAY ALASKA = PUONE 0| EEEEE ‘;‘;g:;’“ ?""l l‘"‘ g ast year. Harbor Saturday morning, loading = % B B A survey party from the Bureau| The key transportation and port b Mning, loading [:25 | 9:30] 5723 | Seward Cordova L] Sitka i of Land Management office is lay- ing out a new addition to Fair- banks, according to Leonard Ber- lin, division engineer. It includes approximately 120 acres south of the city. Berlin returned yesterday from Anchorage and the Interior where he has been the pasgt &wo weeks on business. He said crews have finished sur- vey -at Kotzebue and are now at McGrath surveying for a town- site there. In Anchorage he conferred with officials at the regional office for his department on plans for the coming year. ! He added that crews were work- ing along the Alaska railroad belt surveying homestead ' tracts and along the new Seward-Anchorage road on similar work. Douglas Bid fo Recognize Red China Brings Senate Roars FWASHINGTON, * "Kug.” ‘3r-0p— A suggestion from Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas today that the United States should recognize Red China astonished and riled administration leaders in the Senate. They said he spoke only for himself in expressing such views in a west coast inter- view. Anger in his 'voice, Senator Connally (D-Tex) shouted to his colleagues that Douglas “ought to stay home instead of roaming all around the world and Asia and making fool statements.” “We're really at war—in a sense —with Red China now,” declared Connally, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. Senator McMahon (D-Conn) called Douglas “a private citizen 'Remeval of Acheson without influence on the course of American foreign policy.” Senator Welker (R-Idaho) brought the matter up in the Sen- ate by reading a news dispatch of an interview with the Court Justice. Douglas, in San Francisco after|shonsored by the Smithsonian In- an expedition along the southern|giitytion, the National Geograph- | and - China, | i gociety and the Australian Gov- told a reporter that U. S. recoB-|ernment in 1948. frontiers of Russia nition of Red China would serve as a means to smash China’s po- |ng getzler, head curator of an- | litical ties with Russia. NOTICE Legion of the Moose. Big meet-|or sucpended ing, Priday August 31. Be sure and ear 5 camp. The belief is that be there. Fun and refreshments. 900-2t | the dead person’s spirit. Supreme The collection represents a phase | city on the northeastern coast of Korea was left untouched for more than a year on direct orders from Washington. At Senate hearings, Gen. Doug- las MacArthur said he had been forbidden to bomb the city on grounds that an American plane might mistakenly . fly over or hit Russian territory. The Air Force said preliminary reports said that 97 percent of the bombs dropped Saturday from the B-29 superfortresses landed in the marshalling yard target area. The assessment, based on aerial photographs, indicated that one turntable and a roundhouse were destroyed and that about 60 per- cent of an estimated 136 railroad cars in the southern part of thej| yard was destroyed. The Air Force spokesman said Rashin has been used by the Reds as a stock piling and transship- ment point for arms and equip- ment. He declined to say whether Rashin will be a target for further air attacks. Demanded by Veterans 0f Foreign Wars NEW YORK, Aug. 31—P—The national encampment of the vet- erans of foreign wars today demand- ed the removal of Secretary of State Dean Acheson. A resolution, adopted by voice vote.\ charged the State Department pol- icy had created “intolerable interna- tional and internal situations that can only be solved by instituting a new and American-like leadership in the Department of State.” PAINTED SKULLS EXHIBITED‘ WASHINGTON, D. C. — B —| An exhibit showing an unusual | treatment of the dead has been' installed in the U. S. National Museum here. The exhibits include four abor- iginal skulls from Australia cover- | ed with complex, painted designs. | of an to expedition Australia | The painted skulls, says Frank thropology for the National Mu- | seum, are often carried about by‘[ close relative of the deceased, | from a tree limb possession of the skull will attract | NOTICE Regular meeting of Pioneers of Alaska Igloo No. 6 and Ladies Auxiliary, Friday, August 31, 1951, 1.O.OF. Hall at 8 pm. 899-3t NOTICE Telephone Directories have been distributed; if anyone has been missed, call 420 for delivery. 899-3t Wallace Nelson of Seattle is stop- ping at the Baranof Hotel. TUSSY MEDICATED LOTION Helps DRY and HEAL while covering Unsightly Blemishes and Pimples $1.00 plus tax The changing years have the fish here and going to Pcllcal\foi'i(ers Sep' 5 8 the same afternoon. Bill Smith, better known to his friends as “Picaroon Bill’, bought.v the numbered boat of Arthur Pet- robord. Smith formerly owned the| boat Reliance III. Cards to friends here from Mrs. Jim Lingard who went to Roch- ester, Minn., August 1. states she arrived there Aug. 7 and is very pleased that she went because her trouble has been diagnosed and she is much better. Maxine Alexander, small daugh- ter of Art Alexander, returned via Alaska Coastal plane from Wrang- ell where she spent several days visiting her mother. Guy C. Riley returned from Ju- neau Thursday where he went and met a sister whom he had not seen for many years. Mrs. Roy B. Elliott entertained friends Friday evening in honor of Mrs. Laura Witton who is vis- iting her sister, Mrs. Marguerite ‘Butts, here for the past two w 5 Mrs. Witton left Saturday via Al- aska Coastal for Juneau returning to her home in Seattle via Pan American. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lesher returned from Juneau Friday where they had attended a fam- ily reunion. VISITORS FROM WRANGELL John G. Almquist of Wrangell is| stopping at the Baranof Hotel. FROM SEATTLE Election of officers will take place by the local Jefferson-Jackson club at the first regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. next Wednesday night at the Moose club, it was announced today by Mike Haas, secretary pro tem Henry Roden is president pro tem. Peter Wooed will read a speech given by Robert L. Smith, president of the Los Angeles Daily News, which was delivered at a democratic luncheon in Los Angeles. The title is “What's Right With The Democratic Party.” (anadian Soldier iGets Life Senfence On Manslaughter SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 31—®—Ca- nadian Pvt. Glen Roland Blank, 27, Winnipeg, yesterday was convicted life imprisonment in the grenade killing of three South Korean sol- diers March 17. The sentence is subject to review. Blank testified he had been dri ing the night of March 17 but was positive he did not hurl a grenade. INFORMATION OFFICER DUE HERE SEPT. 7 After visiting offices of Bureau of Land Management the, in ! the Interior and Westward, Mrs. Norma R. Hazeltine, information officer from Washington, D. C,, is due in Juneau Sept. 7, according to Leonard Berlin, division engin- eer. Mrs. Hazeltine will stop here a day or two on her return to Wash- Mrs. H. K. Nelson and Mrs. Ber- tha Olson of Seattle are guests at ' the Baranof Hotel. | ington. — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — MOOSE CALL Come-Join SATURDAY SEPTEMBER lst W Music — Entertainment %4 Dancing to 2:00 A.M. inthe Fun of manslaughter and sentenced to| [IGHT Senepun e \emECTIVE Juns 1, 1954 as featured in Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar e [ <= seauencs of stops variasie 2=5STOP MAY OL OMITTED IF_TRAFFIE ~guw- DOES NOT WARRANT X~ ARRIVAL TIME VARIADLR) =THURSPAYS Ot~ Freighter Service From Seattle September 5 COASTAL MONARCH o For Information Phones 2 and 4 Juneau H. E. GREEN, Agent ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Special Oftering of Smart Stylish Suits Dresses Coats and Coats also Dresse and Suitsof’ other Famous Names * See them at Swansdown Lilli Ann S brought no sounder whiskey. You may place equal trust in every ...BOTH stores... Your Beauty Advisor TOBI PATTON (Ifrinklflx;om every bottle from every 3 arrel because it is still naturally made, ; : J U N EAU mellowed and bottled by us in the same DRUG CO genuine sour mash way.y' e ey The Cotton Shop Stevens Store : b " “w 233 Seward Street 124 Seward Street ” LY Jen Box 1151 — Phone 33 ] ) STITZEL-WELLER DISTILLERY; EST, LOVISVILLE; KENTUCKY 1849

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