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Spring it Here and Clean Up Week it Near May 11—17 'Be Proud to Live in Palmer” uniiUEy Frontiersman PUBLISHED IN THE INTERESTS OF THE MATANUSKA VALLEY TRY A FRONTIERSMAN CLASSIFIED AD for that item you may have for sale, rent or lease. VOLUME V. NO. 35 PALMER. ALASKA. THURSDAY. MAY 8. 1952 PRICE TEN CENTS Valley to Get $377,000 in Military Produce Contracts f World Around Us IN WASHINGTON, D. C. last week the U. S. Supreme Court approved (6-3'» the practice of re-; leasing children from school clas ses for religous instruction, pro vided the instruction is held out side the schools. * In explaining the difference be tween this decision and that in the famous McCollum case of 1943, Associate Justice William O. Douglas wrote for the major ity: “In the McCollum case, the classrooms were used for reli-1 gious instruction, and the forceT of the public school was used to * promote that instruction. Here the public schools do no more than accommodate their schedu les to a program of outside reli gious instruction. . . . No one is forced to go to the religious class room, and no religious exercise of instruction is brought to the classrooms of the public schools. .... We find no constitutional requirement which makes it nec essary for government to be hos tile to religion and to throw its weight against efforts to widen * the effective scope of religious in fluence.” * * • IN FAIRBANKS last week vot ers approved a $250-000 bond is sue for a water treatment plant a $100,000 bond issue to finance telephone expansion, and a $200 000 bond issue for street paving and new sidewalks. A proposal > to sell city-owned property at Weeks Field for reported con struction of a large housing pro ject was approved without a vote to spare. * * * IN CORDOVA drilling will start soon for an oil well at the Katalla- Yakataga field nearby, according to a report confirmed by William T. Foran, geologist and Northern Development Com-, pany official. Qualified experts have expressed the opinion that a great oil reserve may lie in the Cordova area. A shallow well produced to some extent until the 1930s when fire destroyed the equipment. • * » IN ANCHORAGE a recount on the city’s sales tax vote Tuesday, f< April 29, revealed that the pro position lost by nine votes. A total of 1,260 had voted for the tax and 1.046 had voted against it, but a 55 percent majority was necessary for passage. Mean while, a recount was authorized for the school sales tax votes for the Anchorage School District. This proposition lost by 141 votes although 2,234 voted for the mea sure and only 2,126 against it. CLEAN-UP WEEK PICK UP SCHEDULES ANNOUNCED FOR CITY; Sunday marks the beginning of a city-wide clean-up campaign | Local residents and merchants ; are resquested bv civic groups and the City Council to co-oper ate in making their city as beau tiful and inspiring as the setting which surrounds it. To that end. the Kiwanis Club of Palmer is co-ordinating all ac-, tivities in the clean-up week cam- [ paign. On Saturday and Sunday, winning posters made by Pal mer school students in the Health Council’s Clean-Up Poster Con test will be placed in the windows of business establishments. On Wednesday and Thusdav the Ki-1 wanis sound truck will tour the , city, urging citizens to collect all trash on their properties and place it in suitable containers at; the edge of the street. The trash i will be picked up by Russ Felzien and tw’o helpers and placed in the city truck for disposal. No Garbage, Please The pick-up schedule announ ced by Kiwanis committeemen George Crowther and Ed Smith is as follows: North Palmer, north of the highway. Friday morning: ' south of the highway and east; of the railroad tracks, Friday afternoon: the remainder of Pal mer. south of the highway and west of the tracks. Saturday mor ning. Residents are particularly ask (Continued on Page 4) Work Stoppage On Eklutna Tunnel Expected lo End Soon At Eklutna Headquarters this week it was expected that the work stoppage involving the Eklutna Lake half of the tunnel operation would be ended this week. Commenting on the reason for stoppage. Byron Felkner. project engineer- opined that the real rea son was that the contractor had cut off the workers’ on-th-job coffee recently. He said that the contractor’s plan to put an electric hoist on the three-foot diameter bucket that goes down into the 14-foot diameter shaft had met with the workers’ approval. The crisis im mediately preceding the work stoppage happened last week when the gear-controlled cable piled up on the drum and kept the bucket (full of men) from go ing up or down. Eighteen feet from the ground, the workers climbed up a steel ladder to the ground surface, where they changed to a rope ladder to get over the rail protecting the hole. Felkner denied the workers implication that there had been many serious accidents and that the rate was far in excess of that for similar operations. According to personnel records of the con tractors as kept by the Eklutna Project supervisors, there has never been a broken back on the job, as reported recently. Since the start of construction last fall, the only fractures have been a broken leg and a fractured foot. A foreman received the com pound fracture of a lower leg Continued on page 4 New City Mayor and 6 Councilmen to Be Elected Next October Residents of Palmer will elect a mayor and an entire new City Council on the first Tuesday of; October, according to the provi-! sions of the new ordinance which had its first reading at the Coun cil meeting last night. Entitled “An Ordinance Gov erning Elections and Elected Of ficials. Designating Their Terms of Office and Providing Notices of Election and Vacancies, the new city law establishes the Oc tober election date in accordance with the practice being adopted by most Alaskan cities and which was provided for by Territorial law during the last session of the legislature. One of the best rea sons for having municipal elec tions at this time is that it per mits an elected council to draw up a budget for the city's fiscal year and to collect revenues to carry out such budget. Otherwise an elected council might find it self hamstrung by its predeces sor’s budget. Terms of Office In addition to general instruc tions as to how to hold municipal elections and the parliamentary procedure for conducting Council meetings and the business of the city, the ordinance establishes three-year terms for six council men and a two-year term for ma\'or. All seven offices would be filled directly by the qualified electors. Although six councilmen would be elected next October, two of them would be elected for three-year term- two for two-year terms, and two for one-year terms. Thereafter, two council man would be elected each year. The mayor, according to the or dinance. would be elected in odd numbered years. Thus, the mayor elected next October would pro bably be elected for a term of only one year. Nominating petitions with sig natures of 25 qualified electors of Palmer would be necessary for all candidates. Electors signatures Continued on page 10 MAYOR RETURNS Looking younger and refresh ed, Mayor Carl Meier, was back on the job last night, presiding over the City Council. He said he had lost fifty pounds during his trip Outside for medical treat ment, and he appeared to be right. VETERANS ON-FARM I TRAINING PROGRAM ENDS THIS MONTH The Veterans Administration 1 institutional-on-the-farm train ing program will be terminated in Alaska at the end of this month. This information was forward ed to all Veteran instructors in Alaska by the supervisor of the program. Lynn Hollist. Classes will continue until the program closing date. May 31, 1952. At this time the program in wdiich ap proximately 75 Valley Veterans have been enrolled —most of them for the past three years— will be terminated at least a year ahead of the earliest expiration date for the planned four-year program. The program has been admin istered in Alaska under a con tract between the University of Alaska and the Veterans Admin istration. Lynn Hollist. Director of the University of Alaska Ex tension Service, was selected as supervisor and the four-year farm training program was integrated with that of the Extension Ser vice. The recent issue of the so called “180-hour rule” was instru mental in bringing about the can cellation of the contract between the University and the Veterans Administration. In his letter to the VA. President Terris Moore said: “. . . the '180 hour rule’ will disqualify so many trainees from subsistence payments that it be comes impractical to continue the institutional on-the-farm training program. “In Alaska.” Moore explained, ‘part time rather than full-time farming is largely the rule. This is because of the highly seasonal nature of agricultural operations here. To disqualify a man as a farmer because he exceeds 180 hours of work off the farm even though these may be wholly within the seven non-agricultural months of the year, means th.3t Veteran farmer trainees would not have signed a contract for the (program) at all.” President Moore further justi fied the University’s termination of the program on the basis of there not being enough qualify ing trainees in each area neces sary to continue such program. Regarding the retroactive ap plication of the 180-hour rule, Moore made it clear to the VA that the University considers it illegal, citing the Constitution ox Continued on page 10 Baccalaureate Sunday Ushers in Class of '52 Graduation Ceremonies Traditional Baccalaureate ser vices will be held for the Palmer High School Class of 1952 Sun day evening. May 11, at eight o’clock in the school gymnasium. The 20 members of the class will march in their caps and gowns, the boys in blue and the girls in white, to the tune of the Processional, “God of Our Fath ers.” played by Miss Virginia Carle. Following the Invocation, the school chorus will sing “Bless the Lord, O My Soul” by Ivanoff. Later in the program, the chorus will also sing “Holy Art Thou” | by Handel-Clark. Rev. George Geiwitz will de liver the Scripture reading and the address. He has chosen for his subject “Youth’s Challenge.” A solo “Beautiful Savior” by Christianson will be sung by An nie Haverneister. Joining in on the singing of two favorite hymns, “All Hail the Power,” and ‘Taith of Our | Fathers,” will be the entire con 1 gregation The service will close with the Recessional “A Mighty Fortress is Our God,” again played by Miss I Carle. Local Potato Growei 2,470 Tons At .053 COLD WET SPRING DELAYS PLANTING AND BREAK-UP Most farmers in the Valley iave been more interested this .veek in when the water will frain out of their fields than ivhen it will flow freely in the ranana at Nenana. Spring planting has been de layed in the Valley by unseason able dampness resulting from al most nightly light snows that j leave the ground wet and muddy in the day time. Many farmers haven’t been able to get on their land with plows. The same delay has been notic ed in the Tanana Valley, where there is still snow and where j night-time temperatures have j been dipping below the freezing j mark. Congregating around town as they itch impatiently to get to work. Alaskan farmers are mostly agreed that it is “an unusually cold, wet, and late spring.” In Nenana there’s a lot of grumbling because the break-up hasn’t come on schedule. § Local Men Named In SI§8,SCO Suit For Ghugiak Accident Five local men were named in a damage suit totalling S130.200 filed in Third District Court last week. The damage suit is brought by Henning Johnson of Chugiak and stems from an accident involving the death of his seven-year-old daughter. Sherry Lee and the in jury of an older daughter last November 19. The little Chugiak School girl was killed and her nine-vear-old sister. Gail, was in jured when they were struck by a truck while crossing the An chorage-Palmer Highway after being discharged from the school bus. Named in the suit are James Parks, Chugiak School bus driv er; Edward Christensen, owner of the school bus; Andrew' Culli son, driver of the truck; Carl Meier, owner of the truck; and Fred Beyer, owner of a car al legedly parked improperly along the highway at the point of the accident. Witneses at the time of the ac cident stated that the truck was not traveling at an excessive rate of speed. Because of a car park ed close to the highway, Culli son w'as unable to pull off to the side of the road when he sighted the girls in the road. Instead ne hit the car and skidded, knock ing Gail Johnson to the pavement and hitting Sherry with the left front fender and causing instan taneous death. It was also brought out at the time that the school children had been dis charged from the bus improper ly, that the bus had proceeded on its way before the girls had time to reach the other side of the road. Breakdown of the total $180, 200 damages being sought was listed in the complaint drawn Continued on page 10 s to Furnish -.0735 Per Pound Announcement this week of low bidders on military pro duce contracts for Fort Rich ardson- Eimendorf Air Force Base, and Whittier revealed that Valley farmers have an almost certain market for their spuds and green vegetables that will bring them a total of nearlv $377, 000. Among the low bidders an nounced for potatoes to be sup plied from September 1952 thro ugh June 1953: and beets, cab bage. carrots, celery, lettuce, and turnips for the duration of the local season, there was only one producer who does not represent the Valley. He is an Anchorage grower who will furnish 230.000 pounds of potatoes to Fort Rich ardson for the month of Novem ber. Potato prices varied from .0525 for the Anchorage grower to a high of .0735 for the Co-Op’s May-June shipment of 68.000 pounds to Whittier. Co-Op Gets High for Spuds The Co-Op will furnish 15 tons of potatoes monthly to Fort Rich ardson for all but four of the ten months, for a total contract price of $92,230. Contracts for furnish ing 15 tons monthly for seven months to Eimendorf AFB and a total of 204 tons for six months' use at Whittier, brings the Co Op’s spud total tor the three mili tary installations to $213,985 for its potato contracts alone. The Co-Op prices were far above those asked by other low bidders. Starting at .001 per pound for September, the prices are pro gressively higher throughout the year until the high of .0735 is reached for May-June Whittier. The June price to Eimendorf AFB and Fort Richardson was .073. Glenn Woods, who after the Co-Op will furnish the most po tatoes to the three military in stallations, will receive the Fort Richardson contracts for Febru ary. March, and April and the Eimendorf contracts for March and April for a total of 575 tons at .0541 per pound. Two other i local low bidders on potatoes were Lorin Wc-iderkehr. who will furnish 115 tons of potatoes to Eimendorf AFB in November at Continued on page 4 PRIMARY ELECTION COUNT INCOMPLETE Final returns on last Tuesday’s Primary election were still not available this morning. Next week the Frontiersman hopes to publish a complete list of the names that will appear on the Third Division General Elec tion ballot next fall. Meanwhile, it appears almost certain that local Republicans Lee McKinley and M. D. Snodgrass are within the top 10 of their party for House of Representa tives nominations. For the Territorial office of Delegate to Congress, the Demo cratic incumbent E. L. Bartleit i appeared to maintain a slight S lead over his Republican oppon ent. Robert Reeve, although the [ names of both men will appear on the ballot next October. Lead ers in the race for Auditor of Alaska were Neil Moore (Dj and ! Anita Gamick fR>. InjjjArQjjA/-. / Lots, $10 down — $25 per Month — - S— PALMER REALTY ■ CUxifiei Sectiwi