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THE DAILY ALASKA |11 IRE— JUNEAU, ALASK PAGE TWO " ‘ Your Bathroom by Texiron . . . . SPEED GEARFD -0t Vets Told fo Lok for Pay- | !,,n“ g ments Within 60 Days Adsisor, Wil give o talk - from Claim f T e w.| GEORGE BROS, ashington, HERE Department says veterans c: BT % E WEC pay within 60 days of filin: VEGE D! iy by VEGETABLE DISPLAY ments, army finance officer 05 S Leen authorized to hire 3500 t tional employees until Sept The first of the forms ¢ sent out to post it the country, but will be available larger offices bafore ti reach smal on Di % tion is expected to be con by mid-September or soon - after Disbursing officers have be¢ structad to accept sworn statc from applicants on how muct 1 cumulated leave they have t credit, unless the officers has son to suspect fraud D : Rainbow Girls to 3.95 and, bls m SHOWERS - - - In waterproof Vinylite, Textron’s bathroom ensembles . . . Heavenly H "“’.““j”! g shower curtains 3 matching . g MATCHED SETS i 1095 1'11?1?}:'(‘1 \\'Li::}'!ud\l‘ndl'u]‘vlt]*; ol .‘ : Pany On F”da\’l RACE LR - MRS. CASE LAID 10 Rainkow in Juneau a1 minded of the bon voyage 3 0 Friday night at 7:30 oelock in the REST IN PORTLAND 0 Masonic Templle honoring Mrs . o 5 5’2 . Dora Swszenzy, Past Mothe Ad- wW. H r of Al- AA. visor P died last 1 i Q [/[—g :/n CE /557 Miss Patt2 Davis, Worthy P tex a brief wa, announced that all laid r¢ in that cit and Rainbow girl yesierday. Tt had been planned b, cordially invited to attend her daughter, Mr Hugl from last winter, piling ng. smaked cod, ra- get-together party is for th to bring the remains to Juneau f MRS WAGNER FI_IES e TheChiltlves Ccoul oysters. rock fish, filet of Pose of honoring Mrs. Sween interment but transportation & fifty walrus the weck I Spruce Lockers, Phone 71, fore her departure f: Spol troubles prevented and the last rite lD Barrow. This spring too, they attend Grand Assembly. Also, it were held in Portland ny weather with beautiful fleecy clouds, blue s and whit pretties white ice. I chose two 1 Writer and Phofographer native g C liz Brow- ‘ . . er'’s 17 -ol pho-; [t Gives Interesting Account tographed. them in color They wore! | their best parkas a kluks and|{ TRY A BOTTLE OF DELICIOUN willingly posed of Three Weeks Trip T underground meat Mrs. Estelle Wolf Wagner, writer I visited the cellars dug out of perpetual ice.| and photographer, has returned 0 gere they store food suppliss for her Juncau home after an adven- . ”‘,m’m year walrus, polar furous three weeks' trip to Bariow and the Arctic Coast The trip was made in a Bellanca with Sig Wien, Alaska's well known pilot and a friend of Mrs. Wagner for many years. A delay of se bear, seal, ducks, etc. The natit wire short of certain suppl flour, sugar, cigarettes and matches, as the annual supply ship had not as yet arrived at Barrow. I trad- ed candy bars, matches and trink- ral days in Fair- ets for eiderdown and ivory.” . banks was neccssary to await clear- ance of smoke from tundra lires FLIES ALONG COAS: er hundieds of miles of burned Leaving < Mrs. Wagner {lew . Visibility was almost zero in gown th tic Coast with Sig spots. Smoke obscured the coun- wizn on his mail run " . . try so badly that they had to mak ‘Sig gave me a chance to photo- wide detours. graph the Will Rogers-Wiley Post “Smoke and hecat rose into the Memorial at lonely Walakpa, 14 l plane so that I had to remove my|miles west of r | M said Mrs. Wagner. “TLese| At Wainw: I had my first ! I res have been burning all summer ' perience landing on a beach. Sig ! “ in widely separated areas but ap- circled the village three timss, fly- I ‘ I pear to be centered around ing Jewer as he buzzed the villaga : 2 ; Beetles.” Later I learned v A d log Fiying over the high Brooks naq not be ulled high enough Range, then the Endicotts, they out of the water and two umiaks dropped altitude as they flew down tied up in the g place. He {Fie: “Aretic lope. ;AL Umist’ ha|citiontiy ettt qorr fce: He Had FAMILY AND GUESTS WILL Na oil project on the Colville petwoen the AT o . B i e o el TEn Dy eitions en ot CHEER YOUR DISCOVERY und for Sig to got Barrow’s “weather.” Considerable sunspot AT INT HOPE OF TH'S GRAND WINE activity recently in .the Arctic is Another stop was made at Point said to have caused radio “black- Hope with its whalzbon> cemetery To discriminating wine users who seek the finest, Roma cuts.” Barrow had not been con-!and the middens of an early native 2 offers five great Roma Estate California Wines. tacted for several hours with last people. Then ov Kivaline 2 5 % - ! report the village fog-lockad and down to Kotzebue, we landed These wines truly reflect every skill of the vintner’s art HERDS O CARIBOU in that village at 1 p. m. and spent —from selection of choicest grapes to careful bottling. “After leaving Umiat we flew very the night ther % 3 3 S low over the tundra, at timas so ~Mrs. Wagner visited with old i Select your favorite from Roma’s family of superb close I could clearly see tiny flow- {riends and took many pictures of wines! RomA Estate Wines are your assurance of ers and birds. There were so many new structures built by Archie Fer- unvarying excellence at reasonable cost. herds of caribou they appeared like guson and M John Cross dur- 2 bk £0 many ants below us,” said Mrs. ing the past year. { Get Roma Estate Wine today! It will be a real treat Wagner. At Nome she spent three days for the family and friends. “I held a map on my lap and and took the Wien Boeing to Fair followed our course on the entire banks with a Pan Amarican plane © 1946 ROMA WINE COMPANY « LODI « HEALDSBURG » FRESNO—CALIF. back to Juneau As souvenirs of her flight over the Top of the World, Mrs. Wagner brought back many interssting ar- trip. Sig was very co-operative and pointed cut our position and points of interest. It was very foggy so we crawled under it and stayad at 100 to 300 foot altitude. |tielcs: two ¢ bear skins, Eski- “Sig dipped his wings as he flew mo dolls, ivory and whalebone over fom Brewer's reindeer camp carvings and several pounds of the company'’s = el e o EMPLOYEES OF NY ~ Jiruet o, S ; nearly $500,000 he said. confining our operations to Idaho EW Y . lelone,” said -Hardy. “We ate still NEW YORK, Aug. 14—Unionized' | oeits o good propertics. onteide employees of the New York stock idaho. nl«n.mg. forced that world mark I company operates the fa- had rejected Iran’s request for the p (\;(( r;; Ihl"mw' on an emergency ,,... sunshine Mine in the Coeur Withdrawal of Indian troops from make-shift - basis for nearly’ WO pyajoneo of Idaho Basrd, Iraq, city on the Irag-Iran,, hours today when they ked out to take a ballot tha W [é d 1 T ¢ G210 8 in favor of calling 8 _ W. N. Milner, reported pureias- "IHIAD il fields of southera Tran “at any time.” ing Sunshine interests in the| - SR« SRSCR D08 X.. l‘y 2 i . residant presentation to the Iranian gov- _ Members of the & Yukon,' is;'also President of the| . p 2" ted Tran's allegation Local of the United Fi Pclaris-Talis, (ol g 1§ (»’,’m: that the troops’ presence endanger# Unicn, (Ind) which operates the 1argesi o apgyp Janikn ‘relations. 1 mine' in the Juneau re-| “a pritich Forelgn, Office spokes- 1 man, after reading Iran's Aug. 8 of thei e note of protest, had said Britain 3 stood ready to take “unilateral ac- pre ' v tion"—before referring the matter “p E} p‘! | ] ¢ the United Nations—to put down 16 5 il or sudden threat” to & her interests in Iran FOUL, Korea, Aug. 14 — U. .| Britain’s 1930 treaty of alliance s i fticials who declined to be named | With 1rad enables her to keep troop ind other benefits s todgy - cacne” nrgeTsn PR LRI —— ols and ammuniticn, and “an - iled” documents on U. confiscated rean police last Wednes ome of K the political People’s Par- ingly de S. installations, k LONGSHOREMEN OX 10 uestioni that a The same officials said Pt o) ‘he Watar. KOTean youth arrested recently on it ‘”'»‘\4’" ; ‘;l‘”“-“"‘ EATTLE g he vatoer- v g a crew of s ed after . : . an espionage charge admitted he|lP8 @ crew of six, foundred after frént Emplo Association says it/ : ; going ashore off Heikish point in " % ¢ had attended an espionage school F E 3 i will pay retroactive wage increa - ; 3 . | Tolmie Chann:l, B. C., the Coast R 8 S s Bk ok . in Russian cccupied North Korea.| e Vi to hundreds of Puget Sound long- ) Gu was notitied All 2 s | He was quoted further that he ; shoremen during the first two wesks € B0 GECE T ren | aboard were safe. of September. The Association St el bl red, | South bound, the schooner had - timates a million and a half d _““'“‘ i h‘x d ' deli d & catch at Prir Rupert? lars is invol The pay Wwillicy included spreading a 1D€ vessel, b here in 1926, represent a five cent per hour waga |/ e wl"‘\" o m:]r between WS one of the veterans of the increase from October first 1944 to) tACH LA0 WBY RS JKEH N ' Seattle-Alaska halibut fleet. Octc first, 1945 Russia and he nited S - S g 7.4 Tl - i bt Chinese Generalissimo Chiank| The eagle’s weight-lilting capa -l » Kai-shek received his military ity is estimated at eight to 12 e R e u a SR SRR R Sunshine Properly n Yukon Distric YAKIMA, Au Hardy, tre fining Company, di 14 surer o, | I il LU il Sqn Were & 3 ) N A \ § \ ) \ y \ \ ] } } ] \ \ ) Il \ ) ) l l} \ \ § ) ll ) § \ N \ \ ) \ \ ) \ N ) \ \ y \ N \ \ N ) N )\ N l} \ ) N \ \ August 15 EVENING aid. The cn jery part replaceable. Ancherage, Fairba is the Pacific Nerthwest's Now you can enjoy the best. juarantee WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1946 . BRITAIN REFUSES ernment source said today Britain ian border HALIBUTER GOES scheoner UMBRELILAS at « Real HOW .95 10 .95 n All Colosrs JONES - STEVENS B o o B o i B e S B e e e S S DEAF CLINIC BARANOF HOTEL Thursday-Friday-Saturday 16-—17 BY APPOINTMENT already enjoying Today’s Best Hearing with The only aid today that carries a 3- tid that can Be fu Comblete s Ketehikan, and Juneau. Wallis-Spokane oldest and largest Hearing Air Service. 10 MOVE TROOPS FROM IRAN'S SOIL LONDON, Aug. 14—A high gov- ear the trouble Anglo- DOWH; CREW SAFE i4.—The haiibut juina, { skippered by Mathisen Hiwee Techn! rviced in Juneau vice stocks carried in i 60 miles from Barrow.” | RIDES IN WEASEL “He raised Barrow twenty min-| utes before Janding. The Navy base first appeared, then, four miles far- ther the tiny Eskimo village. We landed on the tundra half a mile from the village Here was my first expericnce in climbing into a weasel, those tractor-like vehicies which are the only means of con- veyance used at Barrow, except of course, dog sleds.” Mrs. Wagner spent Barrow as guest of took many Kodachrome and black and white pictures carrying two cameras. Temperatures rangad from 30 to 34 degrees at all times with brisk wind. Snow fell on several occasions starting July 4, but us- ually melted off after lightly cov- ering the ground. ICE IN ARCTIC “There is still considerable ice in| the Arctic Ocean which remains six days in friends. She Barrow ciderdovwn - —— STEAMER MOVEMENTS Denali, from & to arrive Friday. Freighter Palisana, due tomorrcw Alaska scheduled to Seattle Saturday North Sea scheduled to sail from Seattle Sa tur sail attle, scheduled from Seattle, from Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver Saturday Freighter Sqquare Sinnet sched- uled to iian, uled south Princess due to arr from the w est, said from Seattle, August sched- sometime Friday Norah, ive 7:30 at and sails south at 9 am. stebeth Sitka 6 p. scheduled to m. Thursday. leave from Skagway, am. Friday for R A " is older th Vacuum Tube Devices has mar all other one-piece aids com- The personnel of ictured millions - of 5 in corperation thi: Electronic precision instruments for world wide use. invented and % BACIIC NORTIESTS’ ONCRONPLETE HEARING AID SERVICE ' HEARING AID CENTER T A COMPLETE JANITORIAL SERVICE WINDOW AND RUG CLEANING of all types cleaned, waxed and polished by electric machine DAILY SERVICE ON ALL TYPES OF JANITOR WORK ALL 50—Lew Schaffert and leave your number _—_————————-————-‘————'—' 00000000000 il Flo