The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 10, 1946, Page 2

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TEIE DAILY {\L;}SKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'DOUGLAS . NEWS ald Cashen, T. Degan. Veimi and Sante | i IMPROVING DOCK The Douglas Canning Co. Inc.| DISTINGISHED GIFTS FOR MOTHER . ... season’s | Mike Pusich was re-elected Doug- 108 It in shape for the las Fire Chef at last evening’s aperations. Some of the unused | “lection of officers for the Douglas | 10¢k Will be cut away, new piling | Volunteer Fire Department. He has Ibeen re-elected as Fire Chief con- | ™ |for more than 15 years and has|SeVeral vears. neen the anchor of the Department. [ He appointed as his assistant Chief, | checked over during the past weeks Ame Shudshift, who has been serv- | and is being made ready for an ex- 'ing in that capacity for the past|Pe°ted bis scason. year. it g A cookhouse is being maintained | Evorett Martinson was elected for the cam officials now here | Captain of Company No. 1 and‘“‘ the Buckingham Apartments. | Unusually lovely Chevette slips, gowns . . . handsome- { s i g ; Jaincs Wellington Captain of Com- | Mrs. Ernie Zrwin has been hired | as cannery eook for the season. | ly lace trimmed or tailored S8 0% styles . . . Textron Hostess o | Moine Miller, Superintendent, is Coats in printed rayon viected for Presldent was Jack| o girive here May 14. | crepes . . . Warner; Vice President, Anthony | i oS TN | Reiss; Secretary, A. J. Balog; Trus- | | tees, Earl Miller, retiring President FROM ANCHORAGI { for the 3 year term; Tauno Neimi, e 2 yerr term; and Thomas Cashen,| Mr. and Mrs. J. Ferris, of An- 1 year term. Alex Gair Jr., was|chcrage, are staying at the Gastin- | rlected as Chief Truck driver, he to | eau Hotel apnoint his own assistants. — New members elected in the ND.V.F. Department were Rex Her- | mann and Allan MacKenzie. Sale of handmade articles featur- | Maintenance Committee appoint-|ing aprons, childrens play clothes. ed for the following month were:| Also Goodie Sale. Tea and Coffee | Jack Mills, Tony Reiss and Jack' during afternoon=Starts 1 p.m. Warner; New feed committee: Ger- Lutheran Church Parlors. (267-t1) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU ‘ JUNEAU, ALASKA | WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A, I'L, 120TH MERIDIAN TlME: LINGERIE . .. SLIPS 3.50—8.50 GOWNS 11.80 HOSTESS COATS 11.95—29.50 - —— LUTHERAN LADIES AID Max. temp. | TODAY | last | Lowest 4:30 am. 24 hrs, Weather at | Station 24 hrs.* | temp. temp. Precip. 4:30 a.m. | Anchcrage 61 34 36 0 Pt. Cloudy | Barrow 27 4 15 0 Cloudy | Bethel 48 ‘33 38 Trace Pt. Cloudy ; Cordova 57 32 32 0 Pt. Cloudy Dawson 64 29 32 0 Clear | Edmonton 45 21 22 0 Pt. Cloudy Fairbanks L13 36 37 0 Cloudy | Haines 68 44 44 0 Pt. Cloudy | Juneau 69 39 a4 0 Clear | Juneau Airport 89 34 3 0 Pt. Cloudy ' Ketchikan ki 2 42 0 Clear 1 Kotzebue 34 13 13 0 Clear ' MoeGrath 57 33 39 0 Cloudy ‘ Neme 39 | 23 23 0 Clear i Northway 66 | 31 32 0 Pt. Cloudy | Petersburg 62 38 39 0 Pt. Cloudy ! f Portland 55 : 3 7 Prince George A 2% 25 0 Pt. Cloudy | Haflle Carnegle Perfumes Prisice Rupert 7 a6 0 Clear i San Francisco 62 60 52 ‘Trace Drizzle H ¥ Seattle 67 48 49 0 Cloudy | Unforgettable perfumes, colognes by Sitka . 67 %5 45 0 Clear Hattie Carncgie Carnegie Blue, Whitehorse 67 33 34 0 Fog Hypnotie, Nos. 7 or 11, all fime in Yakutat 66 29 32 0 Clear perfect taste . . . *-_(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) WEATHER SYNOPSIS: The Iow' ‘pressure area over the Alaska Pen- insula has deepened during the past 24 hours and the pressure has been falling over the interior of Canada and Alaska. Some rain has fallen | during the past 24 hours over the Alaska Peninsula and the western Aleutian Tslands but elsewhere ove® Alaska and western Canada lmh‘i | rain has fallen. A mass of cold air which was entering the boundary of the United States yesterday morning continues to move southeast- ward over the Plain States and has caused below freezing temperaturt with snow flurries over the northern Plain States and western Montana and Wyoming. . MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN i Reports from Marine Stations at 12:30 P. M. Today APRONS Textren taffeta, tea or cocktail « aprons in lovely pastel colors or stripes . . . Clever printed cottons, bib or tea types . . . WIND Height of Waves | 2.60—2.95 Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) | Cape Decision Clear 52 Calm 1 foot Cape Spencer Clear 56 Calm Calm Eldred Rock Clear 50 NwW 2 Zero { Guard Igland Clear 55 W 2 Zero | Linceln Rock Clear 58 SSE 3 Zero | Point Retréat Clear 53 Calm Zero MARINE FORECAST FOR THE PERIOD ENDING SATURDAY EVENING: Protected waters of Southeast Alaska north of Sumner Strait —variable winds under 15 miles per hour. Protected waters of Southeast ; Alaska south of Frederick Sound and outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Yakutat—variable winds under 15 miles per hour becoming southeasterly winds under 20 miles per hour by Saturday—increasing cloudiness. 1 Low pressure center—28.60 inches—53 degrees north, 168 dr:grecs‘I west, slowly filling. Low pressure center—29.60 inches—53 degrees north,i 165 degrees west, moving slowly northwestward. | PERFUMES—§3.50-835 COLOGNES—$4.00-$12 ] o " ) ] " - M. S. LEOTA Haines and Skagway LEAVING FERRY FLOAT AT 8 A. 1. EVERY WEDNESDAY i M. S. LEOTA < | Fer Charter—$80,00 per day and up’ ’ M. S. DONJAC— ' ] o B Behiends Co QUALITY SINCE /887 For Charter—$45.00 per day and up Both Vessels U. S. Government Inspected PHONE 79 or BLUE 449 | 1 1 Edward Crowe, nighly estesmed pioneer resident of Douglas, died this morning at St. Ann’s Hospital, after a brief illness. Born in Brechin, Scotland, August 16, 1874, Crowe came to Alaska in 1902, and was employed by the Alaska Treadwell Gold Mining Company. During tke first two years he worked in the mine, and thereafter until 1917, when the mine caved in, he was employed as amalgamator in the 300 Mill. From 1917, until October, 1941, when he retired, the deceased was em- ployed in the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company Mill, as shift boss and amalgamator. Survivors are his widow, Eliza, and® Guest Speaker two daughters, Mrs. Eric Anderson of Juneau, and Mrs. Charles Young BRIG C. A ‘ of Montrose, Scotland, and three brothers, G , Wil 3 TAYLOR SR A" e l The deceased was a charter mem- R satinm el | it had solved the problem. One of‘ l =====% EDWARD CROWEDIES ::cr: 2¢ secs v be wnoekea out reach through the holes and wash the other sides of the panes. M plo"EER oF DuuelAs replace the 900 broken sections. { for Christ | e PN Kobis g P. O. Jones and L. Long of Ko- 3 Presents aih_ak are g?estm at »tt:e Baranof. i ¢ ) and then maintenance workers can ' Juneau Youth; THIS MORNING; WAS | i : i After that, they'll merely have to HERE FROM KODIAK P —— Salvation Army Night Instrumental Specials Songs by the SUNBEAMS Sound Pictures s < O ) - .the br with the high I.Q.(It Quenches!) PLACE— ber of Gastineaux Lodge No. 124 F. & A. M, of Douglas, and of the Bethel Tabernacle | 5.l i o Sunea. a J TIME— Funeral arrangements, which will fisfi\l’ 2 ) 'be under the direction of the Ma-! ' sonic bodies, will be annouced later. | 7:45P. M. Saturday Night ALL ARE B - — SEATTLE, May 10.—Officials of the Boeing Aircraft Co. felt some- | IN V I T E D l | | what akin to the man who painted e ! himself in the corner when they e ds - " | locked over their new skylights in mn‘t‘wns kr;ow;\ and used by Plant No, 2 and found there was Hippocrates, the father of medi- no way to wash them. | cine, in the fifth century B. C, Later the company reported that CME BREWERIES, San Francisco Distributed Exelusively in, Alaska by WEST COAST DISTRIBUTORS Seattle, Wash. | driven and new stringers installed, ' fter which the dock should be in| g4, |tinuously at each year's election| Petter shape than it has been for:committee to approve a $1,000,00, ins ) 5 & it |appropriation for the construction; anning equipment has all been|cf 5 Geophysical Institute at the the Department of Terrestrial Mag- NEW INSTITUTE A | e UNVERSITY ALASKA FIREMEN HLECE, ObFIBRRE. |RE work of (he Doisias. fit&d‘;‘:w‘uow Bfmfi SO'UGHT WASHINGTCN, May 10—Two Ini jentists and an Army officer to-'air Territories urged the House | University of Alaska. Fairbanks The bill, by Delegate Bartlett (D- laska), provides that the govern- ment ground furpished by the U The y them by pe construct the buildings on versity. university would The institutz weuld te government agencies and dent organizations in res ctic weather, radar, el and the effacts of Arctic on Army and Navy cloth- equipment and ops; m; Dr. J. A. Fleming, Dirsctor of radio, | sta FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1946 netism, Carnegic Institution of Washington; Dr. J. H. Dellinger, Chief of the Central Radio Propa- gation’Laberatory of the Bureau of Standards here, and Maj. A. R, Beach, Army Signal Corps, said scientific® organizations and the approve, « aid Russia has many such in her Arctic territory. was plan- institute services Witnesses alo said it ned to continue at the the secret research carried on dur- ing the war by the Army and Navy at Fairbanks. 1. STEWARDESS SEAvice 2. WY MEALS ALDFL 7. AVAILIBLE SEAVS TRIPL D & SERYICEVTD KETCRITIN ' FISHERMEN | ¥ 3 > - e e TELEP HO NE 106 s W e t 7 inch GLASS FLOATS { 9 th. BUOY LINE STAINLESS STEEL WIRE | OILSKINS : Other Fishing Supplics ? AlsO=== Overhead Garage Doors for Sale ; ¥ HARBOR GROCERY | Phone 352 Dependable TO Inexpensive Good for One Year DAILY FLIGHTS ANCHORAGE Connecting with more than 100 other points in Alaska served with passengers and express service. Comfortable - 16% Reduction on Roundirip Fares ALASKA AIALINE Phone 667-0ffice Baranof Hotel gy sy o

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