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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1945 ‘ Townsend Club Has House Represen hmn Floor Leader Ralph Brl(‘ker | Republican of Great Falls A A ! The joint resolution would petition Congress to initidte steps ds soon SO(lal and Dan(lng jk's possible to make Alacka the Na- | tion's 46Th State. The Juneau Townsend Club met i Bricker commented that pestWar |jast night and had an interesting travel cver the Alaskan Highway as | pusiness session and an enjoyable well as incret air travel wi social period. Dancing followed the { link the territory closer to the Uni- | meeting, with a number of enlisted Il'?(i States. men a& guests. Music was supplied i = by E. M. McIntyre, violinist, and ]Mrs. Carl C. Collen, pianist. All present were invited to go and take their friends to an old fash- joned square dance sponsored by the USO in the CIO Hall tonight. The Club Council is to meet next D - i PAA IN AND OUT \ A Pan American Airways plane brought the fcllowing passengers to !Juneau today from Seattle: Roy Smith, Irepe Kohner, Irene Pen- | ‘g’“;‘»‘m"j Grace Butrovieh, James| saturday evening at the home, of E oLou : ; Mr, and Mrs. G. E. Almquist at 329 eaving for Seattle were: Andrew | pistin Avenue Tolonen, Gladys Welch, Don Ren- | 3 g sink. . Juneau to Fa#banks—Mrs. Ruth | Coffey and William Sherman. The Army uses face camouflage. paint for Beautiful all-wool coafs in a large as- soriment of sizes and colors . $15—35295 TODAY'S ECHOES . By Graves‘ 2y Iy 7 % Gloves—those small but necessary accessories-—are more glumormn than e many new styles and colors as well as a var iety of skins for every type i g very popular this season. The white caliing card gloves, left, for formal o white washable dos in six-button length. The glazed beaver coat and he haped hat are comple- mented by six-button, pique sewn gloves, center; and the sports coat of red, brown and beige hand- woven wool, right, with which a red hc worn, adds six-button, hand-sewn glade gloves for the h_,flnd accessories. These gloves are all d d by Kislav, (International) Lovely dressy il | | tified the members that the Girl Statehood, select de to a Scouts were shortly to conduct a constitutional conventic c be of | arive for tunds : four frcm cach Divis- if the B large to be the con- |in the ar an; an ele ion to ke called m ratify the con- Cik: Wingerson Is Named Scout Commissioner, Channel Area “Tt’s just the first of all the beautiful things T'm going to give you all my life!” and tailored suits in a wide range of The swing is to Centennl: PEACH BLOSSOM CAKE FLOUR, GERVITA WHEAT CEREAL, FARINA DO MEAL lect officer: ho have ha 4 \\hz-n the ? Was area with tk gave to The m tter sizes and colors . . GREATLY REDUCED 2 Commur many such much dise decision w one Federal 'nt Judges, attorneys, marsials officizls, to con- af thé'out- be only the pr WE ARE PROUD TG ANNOUNCE ihat We Have Received the Authorized Agency for the Gray Marine Motor WE CAN TAKE YOUR ORDER ON THREE MODELS FOUR 52 DireckDrive. 57 H. P. 2to1l 2600 R. P. M. 3tol SIX77 . . . . DBirect Drive 84 H. P. 2 to1l 3000 R. P. M. 3tol SIX 121 . . . Direct Drive 124 H. P. 2 tol 3200 R. P. M. 3 tol 315 to 1 to 1 tinue to sery g2 come- of ithe State e Irwin bill 'wotild turw ‘over to all public- property, and$ now nment. | the 'sta- heries, and ‘game : Alaska Railroad. again, suldn’t be done tow mming pebl”in suggested installing H t unappro the pool to > held by the The bill 4 us'of the f nor refer to Scou The Gastineau Channel Boy Sctmt neau to' lei This flu- movemenit is now fully. recrza@ized have to k + ; s etection of ‘g ftulls [L SRE SR T on the idea Scout Council <nd Scout | b/ ‘ et at a luncheon meet- - I"“ l'l(m(l‘“‘;‘P‘::qc“r,;:‘l:l:’;r l") ing at noon in the Baranof Hotel ” s e Gold Room. Ed Keithahn | was - ’,’I”\'\J‘ e elected president of the local coun- \“” ey ¢il; Dr. J. O. Rude, vice president; e Milt Furness, treasurer; C. L. Wing- de, Raymohd ‘L. Wolfe, We { ere ¢ Holbrook, Frank Hermann arscn, commissioner (will assume P - Pt o0 Furness, Anthony K 1 duties of secretary also). % 2 Harmon, Arthur Hmmu A‘hed Tr2 meeting opehed ~ with | Dr. . 5 Zenger, L. A, Sturm, W. E. H Rude saying it was time to get the |t C " " 0 ook ce Joe W all.reliing: Then D, W. Ostwkelaf T e o W e ot i ¢ ner, Ray Adams, R. E. Robertson Pan American Airw Ed Keithahn, Fred Henning, D: firib WAt det g ' Seous rea R LES —ondi, Tred Henolug, I C this should have. He i Carte council of three membe out e gy P T commissioner, and the following Aiaida Slaiehood ' Most Congressional commictees: a court of honor, ways i eans, camping, junior scout, ond s s e e e 15 Ini¥oduced by Irwin; Salieni Fealures Given Talks Worth Dime a ”md senior scout. He explained the 85 § i o 5 5 DOlefl, "0' v.fldeflbflfl S‘Junim' scout committee could take This Marine Motor Is Clean, Compact, |care of the Cubs and the Senior Powertful and Dependable. (Continued mam Page One) | c¢mmittee the Scouts, Sea Scouts! 5 ——— and Air Scouts. You can have a STANDARD or HEAVY DUTY GENERATOR for charging your 2 } i reason behing the inability of m with te fledged Boy Commissione Ld«\‘h()ud Ac will be- u"vl\e'i in'a joint resolution - listed” for- future introduction in the D, STARTS— FEB Road Engagement .dM. Bz[tazc/fi '€a QUALITY . SINCE /887 2 tn Fred ¥ Mrs. Yenney d by father, husband and six chil- sister and OF NOME DIES 1IN NATIVE ANCHORAGE Margaret Yenney, who was > n 1905, died at Providence Hospital in Anchorage { following.a long iliness. Mrs. Yen- was the daughter of Mr.-and Jack Becker and her mar- 1, in addition to a two Funeral mass was said jn ne, Catholic Church and burfal was in the Catholl¢’ plot ‘of the Anchorage cemetery. brothers. ney Mrs. the | fnjllimm! froia Pa the | Henry Harmon then urged men to do all they could to bac] movement and keep it rolling along. |H2 was followed by Scoutmasters De Vaughn Kershaw and Lou Levy and Cubmaster Ray Adams who made brief reports of their trcops. Levy The point is that here was a| man, idéntified with the pre-Pearl Harbor group of so-called’ isola- tionists, taking the lead in pleading for ‘our immediate participation in a United Nations treaty alliance to| ......... T BEI A S States and th id ‘he kept up? y of deciding it - wihing, N. ¥ five-star Gen Henry Cona. Nice serving—if you can get it A VISW o the Army Alr Forces Convalescent Hospital at H. Arneld, cor “Forces, offers a second Laping to Sgt. Maxie ander of the Army Katz, of Waterbury, (International) defeat the Axis and establish now the' machinery, empowered to act witht force, if necessary, in seeing that the peace that follows is main- | tnlmd There is one significant factor that hasn’t been played upon. | Vandenberg 1§ not only a Republi- can, he is one of the outstanding leaders of his party nationally on fcreign relations. Since the days of Mackinac Island, he Has been leading even the conservative wing of the party away from a policy of nonintervention in world ‘affairs. The elections helped him' mightily. More and . more, observers are asking here today: Is it possible the Republicans are going to take the ball and run with it toward the goal of world peace? That objec- tive doesn't belong to any party, but the leaders, of neither party nor asked ‘the men to do all they could to find an assistant scoutmastet for his troops as he never knew when he, as a member of the United States Coast Guard, might be transferred cut of Juneau. After the elections, Dr. Rude no- our Allies have done more than lose ground for us i that direction lat- ely. Perhaps it will be different now. It has been seriously suggested that President (Roosevelt take with him to the next meeting of |the “Big Three” two members of the Senate foreign rélations commit- tee. One certainly would be Dem- ocrat Chairman Tom Connally. If ihe President wished to'present to Stalin and Churchill a teally uni- ted front, he couldn’t do better now than make the other reptesentative Vandenberg. — . —— McDONALDS HERE Mr. and Mrs. R. D. McDonald, registering from Juneau, are stay- ing at the Baranof Hotel, DURING A HOLD-UP AVICTIM | WALLET WATCH IN A NEARBY MAIL: Box. NEXT DAY_HE WENT 10 THE “NIXIE” DIVISION OF THE POST OFFICE WHERE [ HE GOT HIS VALUABLES! QUICKLY THRUST HIS hould be a State, and promised on his primary platiorm to Intro: an enabling bill. bill provides to determ wlmhe‘ tho citizens of the Territory want | BLAME MAILS FOR DELAYS GET CAUGHT BY A ROBOT THAT PRINTS TIME PLACE % TS NUMBER/ @NE PACKAGE OF CIGARETTES WOULD 4 HOLD 1700 V---—MAIL LETTERS/ SAVE SHIPS BY USING THIS FASTER /# METHOD FOR LETTERS. 120%emuRy o HE! % WW“‘““ \MR TROTT Battery at Trolling Speed! Priority Forms Our Call or Are Available at ° Otfice ' FOR MORE PARTICULARS Write the | COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY EZZAv JUNEAU KELVIE’S ANIMAL HOSPITAL NOW OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY Office: 914 Calhoun Ave. - Phone: Red 115 Ambulance Service BOARDING KENNELS Dr. W. A. Kelvie, Velerinary