62nd Year No. 153 NOME, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27° 1961 Kay has branded Gov. Wm. Egan’s ditional tax revenue to the Prudential of America. ■g®E,/.| then granted con fc-story New York . Bmpire Budding an investment syndi 1 by Lawrence Wien, hb^hHI^^hI I Kennedy Completes Work On Next Year’s Budget PALM BEACH, Fla. UPl — Presi dent Kennedy has completed work on the budget for the next fiscal year and it will ibe balanced, ad ministration officials said today. No figures were disclosed, but speculation on its size has been in the area of $92 ‘billion, about $3 billion above the current year. After visiting his ailing fattier, former Ambassador Joseph Ken nedy, this forenoon, the President returned to the seaside mansion where he is staying. There he re ceived a checkup on his back. Press secretary Pierre Salinger said the doctors reported the back is stronger than last summer, but it will be several months before Kennedy can resume vigorous physical activity. He planned another long con ference with key advisers on the State of Union Message to Con gress in January. The President received word from the doctors attending the elder Kennedy that their patient had made progress in throwing off a mild pneumonia which de veloped after the ex-ambassador suffered a stroke Dec. 19. State Income Tax Forms are' Delayed JUNEAU — Unforeseen de lays at the printing and shipping levels have forced delay in the distribution of state income tax return forms for the 1961 tax year the Department of Revenue said today. The state tax forms, normally mailed prior to Christmas of each year, will not be sent out until after the first of the year, Robert Stevenson, Deputy Revenue Com missioner said. Army and Air Force To Abandon Flying Saucer WASHINGTON UR —The Army and Air Force are abandon ing the flying saucer project, the Pentagon said Tuesday night. The purpose of the project was to produce a light, low-flying ma chine for quick transportation of troops across riven, rough ter rain and similar obstacles. A Defense Department spokes man said the last of a $7.5 mil lion appropriation will be used up by the end of the year and no additional funds will be request ed. The saucer project had been de scribed as making possible an “air-borne cavalry” which could | travel rapidly under almost any conditions. The project had been under the direction of Aircraft Ltd. of Canada. w , — ;,s Chrysler Displays Turbine-Driven Automobile NEW YORK W — The Chrysler Corp. displayed an experimental turbine-driven automobile today and made it clear mass produc tion was being considered. A company spokesman said 50 to 75 of the cars may be put in the hands of customers for test driving in 1963. Results of the tests, further en gineering and cost studies, and consumer reaction could lead to volume production, said Robert Anderson, vice president. Such cars would be a radical departure from the conventional piston-driven vehicles, of which there are now about 70 million on the road in the United States. The turbine engines reportedly have one-fifth as many parts as reciprocating engines and require no oil changes or antifreeze. Speculation was that if tests are successful the car will be manu factured in volume within five years. But Chrysler displayed its optimism by announcing booklets on the car will be available at ail dealers shortly after the first of the year. The gas turbine runs on any fuel that can be sent through a pipe and that will bum with air. Even French perfume could be used,” said a Chrysler engineer. Gasoline would be the more popu lar and accessible fuel, he ex plained. $37,042,363 in Federal Aid Alloted for Alaska Highways JUNEAU m — Alaska’s share of federal aid to highway moneys during the fiscal year starting July 1, 1962, will be $37,042,363, State Highways Director T. Sher ard said today. The federal allocation includes $22,074,616 for primary highways, $14,815,807 for secondary high ways and $161,740 for urban high ways. In order to receive the maxi mum federal aid available, Sher ard said, the state must put up $2,lil8,608 in matching funds. — Skagway Residents Are Mail Hungry JUNEAU (£> — The Coast Guard came to the rescue last night for the mail hungry resi dents of Skagway, who haven’t seen a single piece of mail since Dec. 15. The Coast Guard cutter Sweet brier started loading 9,000 pounds of first class mail here destined for Skagway. At Skagway, the Sweetbrier will pick up a backlog of Christmas mail which has stacked up since Dec. 15. Extremely high winds have prevented air transportation in and out of Skagway for almost two weeks. BELATED GUtEETXMG . . . MISSION, Tex. Uh — Police of this south Texas town received last night a belated Christmas greeting with mixed emotion. The card read: “Merry Christ mas, boys.” It crashed through a plate glass window of police headquarters tied to a rock. Laos’ Summit Talks Fall Apart in Less Than Hear VIENTIANE, Laos — Laos’ laboriously prepared summit of the three princes to form a neu tral government fell apart in leas than an hour today. Apparently there was nothing diplomats could do immediately to put it together again. Neutralist Prince Souvanna Pbcuipa and his pro-Communist half-brother Prince Souphanou vong returned to Vientaine, the capital they fled in 1960, for talks with pro-Western Premier Prince Boun Oum on forming a coalition regime. But Boun Oum refused to meet them at the airport and did not show up at the appointed meeting place. The two visiting princes finally paid a courtesy call on him at his residence, but the meeting lasted less than an hour. U.S. Accepts Soviet Ambas WASHINGTON UB — The So viet Union will send Anatoly Fedororvich Dobrynin, an expert in American affairs to Washing ton os its new ambassador. The State Department announ ced today the Soviet government had asked if Dobrynin would be acceptable and had been advised he would be. This is in accord ance with international usage. Dobrynin, 42, will succeed Mik hail Menshikov, who is depart ing for Moscow and reassign ment next week after almost four years here. The State Department has re ceived no word as to when Dob rynin will arrive here. Stock Market Spurts NEW YORK UP — The stock market spurted today and aroused hopes that the signal had been given for the traditional year-end rally. It was die first real advance in 10 sessions. Bomb Proof Shelters for Newlyweds... DENVER, Colo. UP) — Anthro pologist Margaret Mead urges bomb proof shelters for the world’s newlyweds — to assure continuance of the human race in the event of nuclear war. Dr. Mead, of the American Mu seum of Natural History, offered the suggestion in a talk to the 128th meeting of the American Assn, for the Advancement of Sci ence Tuesday. “Let the United States propose,** she suggested, “that the United Nations be asked to debate the feasibility of an internationally financed shelter system in which a cross-section of the most pro ductive and highly motivated members of every country on every continent could be saved. “Let us propose a program in which each country is assisted to build a blast-proof shelter suffi cient to accommodate all of the people married in that country during a two week period and that during the first six months after marriage they spend two weeks In the shelter.** Addressing a special symposium on “problems of survival,” Dr Mead said such a shelter system for newlyweds would enable the survival of a group that “would be the Biost highly motivated to try to continue their lives to t gether and to reproduce them • selves ” , . Cells For Ladys . . . BARROW m — The weekly Pt. Barrow News reports that the Arc tic Coast village of Barrow now has a jail cell equipped for lady lawbreakers, completed with fe male guard. The News noted that in the past women have been excused from jail sentences in Barrow because there were no facilities to handle them, then die News warned fe male residents of the Arctic Coast village: “If you have been speeding with your dog team, slow down, or you might find yourself in die pokey." i Four Anchorage Firms To Supply State With Highway Equipment* JUNEAU UR — Four Anchorage firms altered low bids for sup plying some $166,000 worth of highway equipment to the state, the Division of Supply said today. The Carrington Co. entered low bids for 18 dump trucks, ranging in size from three to eight yards, and four snow plow attachments. Division Director Richard Berg, said. The Craig-Taylor Equipment Co. bid low on three front end