The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 27, 1946, Page 1

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VOL. LXVL, NO. 10,255 CANNERY ST . VETS' BOARD KIS APPOINTED BY GOVERNOR Gov. Ernest Gruening this morn- 7 Ing announced the appointment of the Alaska World War II Veterans' /" *Board created under Chapter 27 of the 1046 Extraordinary Session. The members are as follows: First Di- vision: Robert E. Ellis of Ketch- ikan; Second Division: John M. Cross of Deering; Third Division: John 8. Hellenthal of Anchorage; Fourth Division: Paul Solka of Falrbanks; at large: L. Embert {Demmert of Klawock. Pursuant to the provisions of the Act, the Board of Administration met and confirmed all five ap- .. pointments unanimously. The entire Board of Administra- tion was present, consisting of Gov. Ernest Gruening, Chairman; Frank Boyle, Territorial Auditor; Oscar G. Olson, Territorial Treasurer; HURLERS IN DUEL; 0AKS WIN GAME 1 (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Casey Stengel's Wreckers from Oakland, with no show of respect for five-game winner Red Lynn of Los Angeles, have second seeding today in the Pacific Coast Baseball League. | Manager Bill Sweeney of the An- gels picked pitching ace Lynn yes- |terday to stop the Oakland ram- | page, but Stengel put on his new |but dependable Rugg Ardizoia for |a delivery duel which produced a |2-1 margin and the Stengel Clan's fifth straight win. This left the resurgent Acorns of | Oakland three and a half games behind the steady Seals of San but not reduced from first place in the current chase. The seals made it three out of | | | Francisco, who have been tied for! Leonard Smith, Territorial HIghWay | 1our against Sacramento, out-slug- Engineer; Ralph Rivers, Attorney|ging the Solons for a 7-4 decision, General, and James C. Ryan, Com- | ghije the San Diego Padres were missioner of Education. - —— HOSPITAL NOTES ! four clashes with Portland. On the | four-hit hurling of Manuel Perez {winning fheir third, 3 to 2, in| | ! |brides and children arriving on | Pprobation for the rest of the period. | |the Hollywood Stars blanked the| | Seattle Rainiers, 9 to 0, for a 3-1| IRISH WAR BRIDE, | ANCHORAGE BOUND, HELD UP IN SEATTLE Kathleen Carroll, an Irish war |bride from famous Londonderry ‘Town, hopes labor differences will be settled soon so she can continue her journey to meet her husband, policeman Thomas Carroll, of An- | chorage, Alaska. [ “It’s hard to wait here after trav- |eling 5,000 miles. But then I'm get- ting acouainted with my new fam- ily,” she smiled yesterday at the home of Mrs. Harry Marcuse, her husband’s aunt. Reservations to Al- aska, she explained, just aren’t ob- tainable. Mrs, Carroll first met her hus- band at a dance given for the first contingent of American soldfers to arrive in northern Ireland in 1942. They were married in December of that year. “Last time I saw Tom was in the hospital, after he was wounded near Strashourg, France, Mrs. Car- roll said. She added proudly her husband wears the Presidential for gallantry in action. | Mrs. Carroll was cne of 467 war the transport Henry Gibbons in New York, | “This was a big step for me,” SEATTLE, April 27—Pretty Mrs.| “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE e ee— JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS RIKE ARBITRATION HCOVER APPEALS FOR AID NOW FOR - TRONDSEN | starvine INDIA 0" BEA(H‘MiIIions imopardy of ‘ A Life Unless Food Reach- ‘Master of lll-Fafed Steam-| ' es Them Quickly er Yukon Suspended | mhvoasor for Eigh' Mon'hs Herbert Hoover, winding up his in- vestigation of food conditions in : éand Asia, issued a warning | SEATTLE, April 27.—Capt. Chris|thaf unless the outside world rush- {E. Trondsen, Veteran of the es supplies to the stricken pooples | storm-haunted Alaska shipping (of India, “tens of millions” will be route, was “on the beach” today for [the second time in his career, his CAPTAIN {“InJeopardy of life.” st districts are on the edge | license suspended for eight months 'of precipice,” Hoover sald in a /by a Coast Guard Board which ement issued last night. “It is jlruled yesterday he was negldent im) ible to hazard what the | when the liner Yukon ran aground d¢ toll might be. If there were |in Johnstone Bay Feb. 4. no“lmports in the deficit areas, it Eleven lives were lost before a, be too terrible to contem- rescue fleet of Coast Guard, Navy|Pist Every ton of food imported land Army craft fought through the l!;h these areas will lessen the loss { ' 1 o storm to reach the stricken vessel 230/000,000 e | Asserting that some and save most of its nearly 500 pas. { B are Juvihand th: SaotktiBin. E, India, April 27— “MISS VENUS” | \ BLAZE AT - FAIRBANKS IS COSTLY |Business Area on Chena | Slough Destroyed-100 Persons Homeless | FAIRBANKS, Alaska, April 27— | A business area fronting on Chena ;Slough lay In ruins today after a | seven-hour fire destroyed tiree | two-story buildings with an esti- |mated loss of more than $300,000. | The 100-room Pioneer Hotel was saved as firemen fought the flames | Thursday with 20 lines of hose, but the 41-room Northern Hotel and | | 3 ) coffee shop, owned by M r Berge, was burred o th round The Ploneer Grill, two liquor stores and the Allles room, which wes a popular meeting place for | Russian and American officers dur- ing the war, were also destroyed. FAILS ISSUES NOT SUBMITTED, ~ IS REPORT Further M;Ji_llgs Sched- uled - Situation in ; Coast Strife i SEATTLE, A_px:l- 27.—Manage- |ment and labor both refused yes- terday to submit {ssues in the Alas- ka Cannery Workers strike to ar- bitration. Federal Labor Conciliator A. L. Feterson sald further meetings of Union and industry representatives are scheduled. COASTWISE SITUATION SAN FRANCISCO, April 27— Political action rather than efforts to halt shipments to certain coun- tries will express the international Unit Citation and ‘the silver star| sengers. The Board ruled, however, that | Captain Trondsen could return to |sea in ‘wo months and remain on ! It was brought out at the hearing | that the skipper was suspended 10 ;days in 1942 in connection with the |culties” throughout India, the | former Presicent said that in the past drastic and ‘Intelligent” ra- tioning has eased the problem some- what but that in such districts as Mysore “even this ration (now |about 1460 calories a day) has Nearly 100 peraons were mndc’ homeless ana 50 workers lost their | jobs when their places of business | burned. | The Allies Room, night club, was | | owned by Don Hammond. i Don Cook, owner of the Pioneer A GROUP OF PROMINENT ART- ISTS selected Miss Taylor Alien of 'Gloversville, N. Y., as the year's “Miss Venus,” The perfectly mold- ed Venus, who decorates the chorus line at a New York night ’pollcy of CIO longshoremen in the jfuture, says Harry Bridges, Inter- national President of the union. His assertion that the union did not expect to allow politics to en- jter into west coast dock work was made before a Federal fact-finding iboard concluding an investigation of |begun to break down.” club, appeared at the annual Art- | i i " be- series edge. I she said shyly. “You know, it's the grounding of the steamer Cordova. | s . Grill, lost all of his personal be- ia threatened Pacific coast strike “:‘,:' ;::;:nu (;;J:hgm:;::rmmm‘ hm;z time I've ever been out o:; The Board decided the captain!m:[b";:x;r ma‘:;‘rz:wgau::zfla;he (;:?lvngmgs in the apartment over-j ists’ Ball at Webster Hall in New jye;t;rd;z;m ® 1 ] B el RESULTS FRIDAY { Treland, had failed to make use of naviga- | . curtalled ' fimports }eads | York. ol , headed by James Fly, BB 8 . tola 3/ Oakland 2: Los Angeles 1. «Ey — § _|tional aids. Trondsen’s attorney [CChr droushts cu Be Salvage of any stock was pre- | — i - |18 to report by May 12 on its find~ Hospital — weight 8 pounds, Everything’s different in Amer- | b e a jand & normally low standard of, % | ings in the dispute in which the ounces. | Hollywood 9; Seattle 0. |ica, especially the food, but I just|COmPlained that Such wWodern 06 jying, R ‘ PTY 1 lunion sceks a retroactive pay fne ‘Admitted yesterday were Mrs. Lee| San Diego 3; Portland 2. {know I'm going to like being a|YelOPMeENts as 4 To alleviate the situation, he Hgin of ‘She:fife: Iy “"dc'l D UG Icrease from 8115 to $1.50 an hour. San Francisco 7; Sacramento 4. | citizen, and I'm going to like liv-|dar wer> denied commercial xsh""":rem)mmcndsd that rice ke import- | termined. |ing in Alaska, too,” she said. even though sts wre standing idle cq from Siam and that Australia| Insurance | {in Naval warehouses. '“expedite her program of shipments half of the val Blackman and Dr. N. Berneta Block, both surgical patients, and +The waterfront | loyers’ Associa-~ ition has offered 81, only covered about K NEWS that last day and that last falter- ing opinion, Harlan Piske Stone kept his zest for living, Despite sedate years on the na- tion’s highest court, there was a tovable, boyish quality about Chief Justice Stone. In his home, for in- stance, was the fulfillment of every small boy’s dream—a secret button which caused a bookcase to swing hidden door led to a secret pas- sageway from the Chief Justice's| aside, revealing a hidden door. This study to his dining room. 4 All too soon, most of us lose our ‘boyhood. But Harlan Stone made| ‘his boyhcod dreams of hidden doors and secret passageways come true. Bome parents, of course, might not agree that the pixie in Stone's heart set a proper example for their sons. They might even be shocked to learn that, while at Ambherst, tHe Chief Justice led a raid on & ‘Boston Express office and stole the statue of Sabrina, goddess of Am- herst men, spirited it away from Amberst alumni, and hid it in a Chesterfield, N. H., barn. Some years later, Stone married the ' daughter of the man who owned that barn. “HARLEQUIN” STONE In fact there were a lot of thirigs about young Harlan Stone that meticulous parents might not ap- prove. Some of his neighbors even thought his name should have been Harlequin, for he led so many youthful night-shirt and ducking | parties that eventually he was ex- pelled from an agricultural col- lege. I would pick Harlan Stone as a model for my boy, despite all this, because shortly thereafter he man- aged to narness his exuberance and worked his way through Amherst by peddling typewriters, selling in- (Continued on Page Four) ALASKA AIRLINES ‘FLIES 43 FRIDAY Alaska Airlines yesierday flew 14 incoming and 29 outgoing passen- gers on its Starliner Fairbanks ar- |riving and leaving at the Juneau | airport. From Anchorage were: Gliz Har- rington, Charles Gibbs, James | | 1 ton, W. Leahs, J. L. Miller, Joseph P. Llanos, G. Kostronatinoss, R. Baker, H. Baker, G. E. Knight, Carl Carlson, Francis Carlson. Leaving for Anchorage were the following passengers: ‘Thomas Hordtvedt, W. Lynd, M. Kreutz- man, Louis Otness, Jack Meadors, Henry Martin, Rita Robinson, B. F. Odland, E. R. Buchanan, L. H. Mil- iler, Ward William, Lowell Wells, George Henington, Roy B. Hening- ton, Mrs. Henington, Mrs. Don Travis, Dona Travis, . Robert Tra- vis, PFrancis Brown, Albert Kalis, Frank Zakonski, D. Torrogo; to Gustavus, Mrs. Albert Newburn, M. | Chase. NEW CHAMPION " INGOLF CIRCLES The country’s oldest continuous amateur golf tournament, the North and South of Pinehurst had a new champion today. nahan of Toledo,’ O., who defeated Hub Covington of Orangeburg, S. C., 6 up with 5 to play in the 36- ney yesterday. Kerns, Richard Willard, W. D. Pay-| Reddin, R. H. Slate, E. Ring, R. W.| Knight, A. E. Odland, Mrs. A. E./ PINEHURST, N. C, April 27— He is bronzed young Frank Stra- | The Alaska Marine Workers Un- {ion, Douglag local, held an election of officers at their special mecting last night, and the following mem- bers were chosen to office: Ben- jamin See, President; Mrs. Sarah Bowman, Vice President; 8. A. Stevens, Secretary; Mrs. Anna Murphy, Treasurer; George Stevens, Sergeant-at-Arms; Robert Schop- pert, Agent, Cannery Workers; Thomas Bowman, Agent, Fisher- men. Most of the members are gillnet fishermen, who have already sign- the season’s contract with the ESe- bastian-Stuart Fish Co., and will !start fishing in the Taku Inlet ERICAN HAS PAN AM 29, FRIDAY FLIGHTS Pan American Airways flew 29 passengers to and from this city yesterday. Arriving here from Seattle were: Rose Harington, Malcolm Moe, Lea Moe, Shirley Moe, Isabel Funk, P. 8. Ganty, Arthur Graves, Joseph Dick Frasier, Margery Frasier, George Frasier, Edward Combs, | Howard Anderson, George Hening- ton] Roy Henington. Passengers leaving for White- {horse were: Col. C. Moody; for I'Seattle: Ardell Cleveland, Hugh |J. Wade, Jerry Wade, Willilam Gey- ser, Robert Baker, Marjorie Bak- |er, Gerald Baker, James Baker and 'Bill Baker. e JUDGE KEHOE LEAVES Judge J. W. Kehoe, who has been ‘holding court in Juneau in the ab- sence of Judge George F, Alexan- der, accompanied by Mrs. Kehoe, hole final of the 46th annual tour.|has left viA plane for his he.d-iyenerdny and is stopping at Hotel quarters at Nome. already has been proved a menace lowed to mention the extent of the| to peace and that subsidiary pur- | suffering,” deciared the broadcast, suit of the question would lead only recorded last night in London.| to delay, thus forestalling immed—;“Only the church has the power to late action against Spain. iraise its voice before the world. The sober, black-haired Soviet| «Many of the priests who have delegate became the last holdout|gshared ineir bread with the refu-| against the appointment f a sub-|gees ars too weak to celebrate a committee to compile all the avail- gservice, Added to the great physical able data on Spain from the intel- | sytfering is the great spiritual bur- ligence cervices of .the individual|den. There is no food, no blankets, ' governments of the U.N. and any o medicine, no nothing. | additional evidence it may turn Up.| «In camps bullt to accommodate Australian delegate W. R. Hodgson |2000 to 4,000 some 50 people die| | { { Walter Andrews and Arne Shud- shift, members of the School Board. Music for the Waltz and March was léd by Mr. Seaman at ' 'the piano. Between dances, two |live wire Clowns were in action {for entertainment, Jimmy Cuth-, ! vert and Gary Bach, ' 3 Bt T gy | Miss A Daylighi Saving |, “ia, Wythert: unior clse uch to do with the evening's suc- Time for Some queror, n 1927, Young swam the choppy stretch to win $25,000 of- fered by the late Willlam Wrigley, Young was the only finisher of 1C2 entrants in that contest, so Elyter faces a rough job. A RO 1 R i ! | NO LIBRARY Dudley Smithberg, medical pa- STANDING OF CLUBS | Mrs. Carroll's mother-in-law, i lue of the buldings. | B a5 oS 3 i FANRR0 Siount Joagmo Mus. Etta Carroll, will accompang, S oo of wheat and grain to India and S e : ! @ Dismissed were Mrs. C. E. John-| Teams w L Pet ner to Anchorage. oo | £ > * begin at once deliveries in quan-| i | HELEN ISAAK PROM QUEEN MEMOM (m : son, surgical case, and Mrs. B. W.|San Francisco A" g AR A L { tities which hitherto had been re-| y | The ‘Dillaias. ducides sagst’ &' | . McCormick and Don -Underweod, Qakland- " 18 11 621 o v P | serves-for -shipment later in the; p . ! rel coes v rig A 3 o) o Jon , . ! h o ! % ,real suecess Tast evenifig at thelr| A both medical patierits. . ylog, Angeles oo o ARDENE CLEVELAND | vear. jannual Junior Ball, held at the| 2 ‘ The Government Hospital ad- San. Dicgo 14 15 483 . | e i : { Gym of the Douglas Public Schools. | b f mitted Elizabeth - Nakamura, Ju- Hollywood ... 13 14 .«nl '.HVES 'Io spm f | & | The event attracted a very goodi lvm (m’. m f H 0 ybelle al y acramen . | | i » { S ‘l’)m.lal;.‘;"‘ and Johnny Ebona, Ju- Seattle 9 19 321 SUMMER '" SEAmE | i The Bail-room was auiractively ' : ; | . | {decorated with a carnival motif,’ The cholf of Memoriai Presby- neau. _ American Leaguo | | ! with cutouts of all the Animal spe- terian Church and the Pastor, the AR, o s R Teams w L Pet| Mrs. Ardelle Cieveland was a ) 1 abonid. e widis gaily colored Rev. Walter A. Soboleff, left at % New York 8 3 727 passenger yesterday aboard a PAA i AB“SE bERM A“S streamers strung about, the celling 5 ©¢lock this morning for special The Was lng‘ion,geosmp 8 3 .727|plane, enroute to Seattle, where M 8 t f UNSC w t ! ‘ | %1d solvidi Batisons foatlis th me‘servicu at Haines, Klukwan, and g B Sl 0TI DR e K Y. ajority 0 anis —_ | AVALON, Calif, April 27—With|air. The decorations proved the in-, SKAEWAY. : Merr 'GO'ROund C}‘f b wid Y 9 i S b '" I ' | g H in @ blue-ayed blond sat the end of |terest the Juniors, had taken n' Following ' motor drive up ihg ‘Cle’\?:li‘; * ; 2 .f;;‘vN‘zzlec;:it ffi:g ):::v'v:;:]e 2:;;’;1 u (0mm| ee nves 1- COfldlthflS Afe HOI’I’IMe II'I the line, 19-year-old Jimmy Sly- preparing for the event, and were g:lk;l;s:“v" v‘uw‘;e held m’ BrikcilSs, . 1 oot | H 1 2 |ter dives into Santa Catalina highly eppreciated by the crowd. | | By DREW PEARSON | Washington 3 7 3ofand the states in recent years. | gation of Franco Spain East. Germany Claims | Snunnel ronions on o atiovans| | Kiukwan this evening. Y Philadelphia 2 8 .200{ During her stay here she made s s e '22-mile swim to the California| Miss Felen Isaak, Valadictorian' Sunday morning service will be WASHINGTON — If T were to| Nationas: Eoagus her home with her son and| yow YORK, Aprl 27—A ma- Eyewifness | Matnland. {of the Senior Class this year was held in Haines and an evening ser- choose o leading Amerlcan of 1046 5 ToanS B veiand. . She. takés with her Jority of the United Nations Secur- | “The citizens of Seal Beach, €lected Queen and marched to the Vice at Skagway, as an incpiration to my son, I 'm“k’s{w lg\?m : :1; m the best wishes of her many| ity Council membership hoped today = April, 27 The Vatiean| T4l coast community, Hiave posted ?'M"'s“ T:m?: ;f,c‘;;;p.xfi: = 'n:h :’rl':gw:-gum th;:d zh:b‘l,:: th ho died | g * 5 !that a weekend message with new I« 3 e abodt $500 which Slyter — if he four attendants, Phyl i J 4 L';‘Lfl:w:"f}':m ho tuan Wit Sied | Boeton 5 - 4 pog|friends, wnd thefr hops for her U R B TR e oW milght|adio olting & “repart” of an unl-'gonufe S M Wli.h_pm, to Edith Wellington, Mae Cuthbert Paul H. Prouty, General Missionary, e Thliod Bt | Chicago 4 4 5oo,return to Juneau soon. move Soviet delegate Andrel A. dentified eyewitness, charges "“"‘uss to wed Rose Anne Brennan, 8hd Pat Balog. She was announc- |#nd Captain Andrew J. Wanamakor. 3 - b e choose him not only because of his| porourse oo &6 400) { Gromyko from his steadfast opposi- 50 Germans are perishing eachisg one of Seal Beach's loveltest. |©d and crowned by Miss Noreen | great attainments, not only be-! cf w‘ o 4 7 .00} AMwu “ Doufim |tion to any subcommittee investi-| Week in camps in the Russian oc-| 1 eqying Catalina at 8 pm. (PST) |Andrews,: after which Trevor Da- @ 0.0 9. 4.8,.@ 0 0 &6 ¢ cause he rose to high from suchln?leagnla "}lfl 8 T .. | gation of Franco Spain. | eupation. sone of Eastern Germany |the grease-coated Slyter hopes to Vis, photographed the group. humble beginnings; but because he| o C Pt gk Eum WI(ERS' There was nothing, however, toi“m‘d widespread conditions of dis-|oraox the mark of 16 hours, 48| The Queen was waltzed away by |® TIDE TABLE never lost his youth. Even up until | : | indicate that Gromyko would wav- | €ase, plunder, starvaticn and rape.’minytes set by Canadian George Fred Weir. » |er from his contention that Spain| “The German press is not al-| Young, only previous channel con- Grand March was led by Mrs APRIL 28 Low tide 5:39 am., 17 ft, High tide 11:47 a.m., 154 ft. Low tide 17:52 pm, 05 fL APRIL 29 High tide 0:11 am., 172 ft. Low tide 6:22 am, -05 {t. High tide 12:36 p.m, 16.7 ft. Low tide 18:34 pm,, -0.2 ft. ® & 8 40 00 0 B e S FREIGHTER DERBLAY HERE The freighter Derblay tied up at ®s0e0s0ce000s e twice revised his resolution pro- | posing the subcommittee inquiry in | an effort to bring the Council to unanimous agreement. | The third draft was drawn be- |fore yesterday's session at a last- minute breakfast conference at | which Hodgson won over French delegate Henri Bonnet and Dr. Oscar Lange of Poland, who had | riddled the subcommittee proposal | with amendments and counter-pro- | each week.” ‘The broadcast said children in the area were suffering and that (BY THE TATED PRES! ) cries for help wefe going up from| Daylight saving time will go in- | “girls and women who are being to effect at 2 am. tomorrow (Sun- |brutally raped and whose bodily 98¥) In six eastern states and por- |and spiritual health is completely tons of 19 otiiers. | shaken, so that they are unable to TWenty threc states and the Dis- give birth to a healthy child. juict of Columbia, however, will | “There are no doctors to cope Ret observe the time change. | with venereal diseases, and if there| States which will push timepfec- | were any, there are no medicines,” | 5 ahead one hour on a state-wide States Tomorrow 't was announced today by Li- fan Edla Cashen, that no I k y night will be held today, or next Tuesday. The floors of the Council Chambers and Fire Hall where the library is held is being ' sanded and re-varnished and no traffic 1s allowed until inished. Next library night will be on Sate urday. e posals the day before in a partial lineup with the adamant Gromyko. As soon as the final draft was laid before the delegates, Rafael de la Colina, delegate of Mexico, the radio said. “The Eastern half of the Russian zone has been thoroughly plunder- even seeds for the coming year. Cord, Steve Colman, Hugh Wilson,| maneuvered a quick adjournment|only some two to four percent of |2 am. tomorrow. until 3 om. EST Monday in order‘mg cattle is still there. that new instructions might be! “Thousands of children have for sought in the interim from the|a year been without any teaching. members’ home governments and|They just vegetate, are undernour- lalso to avoid a repetition ot» the | jshed, broken in body and spirit.” previous day’s 3% hours of ‘con-| ————————— , fused debate. .- TEXANS HERE PHILLIPS RITES MONDAY Funeral services for Luther Phil- livs, 16-year-old native boy who died April 18 at the Skagway San- atorium, wili be held at 2 pun. Monday in the Charles W. Carter Mortuary Chapel. The Rev. William McIntyre. 8. J., will conGuct services, to be follow- ed by interment in Evergreen Cem- etery. ‘W. F. Heflin and Robert 8. Wil- liams, registering from Texarkana, Texas, are staying at Hotel Juneau during their visit here. ———— SITKAN HERE Mrs. L. J. Gehrig of Sitka arrived Juneau. led,” it continued. “There are not! |basis are New Jersey, Massachu- ,;sem;, New Hampshire, Rhode Is- |land, Vermont and Connecticut. | Most Canadian citles will observe | | i i i COASTAL AIRLINES i, OUT YESTERDAY | Alaska Coastal Airlines flew the following passengers yesterday: to |Hoonah: J. J. Herbert, Mr. and! Mrs. H. Mercer, Charles Porter,' ! daylight saving time beginning at Eighth Birthday Is ' Occasion for Party e, pouss, s 5 washs frem Hoonah: Joseph Pratt, Mar- Marcia Lee Van Sandt is cele- garet Zinn, Jackie Andrews, Jeannie ‘brating her eighth birthday thh}Wclsh. Harry Douglas; to Peters- I,nm.emoon with a “Pink Party” for burg: Charles Goldstein, Van Mav- |her little friends at the home of ern. i her parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. N.l To Pelican: Andy Rahkanin;. Van Sandt. |from Pelican: John Caori; from E The invited guests include Judy Ketchikan: Gov. Ernest Gruening,| |Foss, Kay Fisk, Linda Phillips, Charles D .Duisny, Manuel 8. Krup- | Yvonne Guy, Sylvia Swanson, Con~iuaw. R. Mathews; to Sitka: chnrlu{ nie Brown, Carla Carter, Margaret, Welcome, Sid Thompson, the Rev. Ann Pyle, Lorraine Willlams, ann’R. E. Baker, Moni Corlquist, D.' Chamberlain and Helen Claire Lis-| White, Willlam Fairclough, Francis ter. | Brown, Mrs. C. Baker. :the Government Dock at 7 am. todav to load lumber for the Alaska Road Commission. The ship will sail westward after a two-day stop here. for 21 days by the ILWU strike. Pollowing strike settlement the ship | was ordered north, again without returning to Seattle. e LEAVES FOR ANCHORAGE Mrs. Eleanor Lucas and little daughter has left by plane to join her husband at Anchorage, after spending the past several months in Juneau with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. I Lucas, - e — - HUGH WADE GOES SOUTH Hugh Wade, Director of the So- cial Security Board, accompanied by his son Jerry has left for a va- cation trip to the states via PAA plane. They will join Mrs. Wade who has been in the south several weeks. DICK HALINEN ARRIVES Dick Halinen of Petersburg is a guest at the Gastineau. o Gordon Hall of Pelican City is registered at the Gastineau during his visit in this eity,

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