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The Tour C col American W neau has perhaps more than its Most of Alaska Next 16 Fourth cof July Queen candidates. Olson of Anchorage and Palmer fit, the girls modeled summertime Texas; Mrs. Frank . Huss almost the casual ease of profes- country alon denfield, New Jersey; Henderson B The wardrobes so charmingly The second annual tour assem- Behrends Store. The Queen Contest FOR THREE DAYS|NIGHT'S STYLE SHOW share of pretty girls, and this was amply demonstrated last night Two Months put on a Style Show at the Capnol Pan-Pacilic Good Neighbor Theatre. ved PAA yesterday after-|cotton frocks, silk afternon dresses, party consists of Mr.[cu(c hostess pajamas, suits and gla- Cineinnati, Ohio; Willlam H. sional models, to the aecompani- use of Glassboro, New Jersey; ment of enthusiastic applause from Gregory of Washington, D. C.; iill‘dlb[)!'d)’(‘d by the young models of whom are guests.at the Baranof were furnished by the Channel Ap- bled at Seattle and held their ac- committee and all others taking quaintance banquet at the Olympic part in the July Fourth celebration PAGE EIGHT Pan : Pa(lfl( Pany '0 See It has long becn said that Ju-| i When theloveliest of them all, the ducted this year by Lloyd| Starting with a smart tennis out- Mrs. Barbara Huntress of El morous evening gowns, doing it with . Helen C. Blenderman of Had- the audience Hotel. parel Shop, Stevens and B. M. Hotel on June 17. They arrived here preparations have voiced sincere |OUEEN CONTESTANTS. PLANE GOES INTOCRASH; | i5? Three American Crew Called Back, Boy Died . Members, 18 Passengers Survive, Is Report NEW YORK, June 19.—(»—A Pan tion with one engine afire, crashed in darkness today in desolate Syrian | phates River, killing 15 ¢f the 36| projector. persons aboard It was the fourth major disaster was asked and Shell Simons of [h("]fomlfl missions on which he has to overtake a U. S. commercial air| | Alaska Coastal Airlines immediately | just completed a movie. carrier in the last 22 day The 15 dead included members, all Americans, and eight ngers, none of them U. S. citi- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU. ALASKA _ \HAINESBOY IS [REPORTANSTO | ELECTROCUTED; CLOSE JUNEAU AID SUMMONED SCHOOL HEARD An unofficial report that the Al- i(TIMS[ DO('OT Resplraior Flown,asxa Native Service is closing the from Juneau But Trip ANS school in Juneau was brought up for discussion today at the Ju- neau Chamber of Commerce meet- | ing by R. E. Robertson. He suggested that the Chamber investigate the report and protest Death, as mc result of electrocu—‘me closure, stating that the uly‘ tion, came at 2 a.m. today to a 16- would be unable to provide educa- ‘)var old Haines boy believed to be | tional facilities for all native chnd- |Owen Lewis, son of Mr. and O. I. 'ren here. Lewis of Haines. According to mea-} Guests at today’s meeting includ-l ger reports received in Juneau, the ed members of the Pan-Pacific young man received a severe charge Good Neighbor Tour. William of electricity at 8 o'clock last night Krouse of Philadelphia, who is while working on a motion picture making an Alaska travelogue color ‘movle during the trip, spoke brief- aid from Juneau 'ly, telling of the history of the Cal- orld Airways Constella- | g the banks of the Eu- At 11:30 p.m, !pegan warming up a plane to fly| Charles Sterling, St. Paul attor- Dr. C. C. Carter and Howard Dilg ’ne, was also a guest. He is the with the City Fire Department’s|brother of Hawley Sterling of Ju- respirator to Haires. Meanwhile, a neau. change in plans came through and ven crew members yesterday afternoon and will spend thanks and appreciation to these' Thm‘ American crew Simmons was asked to go up in a| three days taking in all the inter- merchants, and to Homer Garvin of and 18 passengers survived. All of iand plane :nsteaa of a seaplane. HAlIBUI VESSH_ esting things to be een. They wiil the Capitol Theatre, for their gen- the survivors were described ns . Because of the delay in cha n'm"‘ leave for Anchorage Saturday and erous help and cooperation. “safe” although an early report had | planes and waiting for weather| OWNERS SIG"'NG will be there until Tuesday Poster pictures of the Queen con- listed three as seriously hurt and | clearance, Simmons was not '||Jlf" The party will spend a few days testants are appearing in most Seven with minor injuries. Later, to take off until 1:45 am. At 2| at the Chugach Lodge near Sew- downtown store windows, and as @ arbled message from a Pan Am-|oclock, while enroute to the scenc, | OI_D AGREEMENIS erican representative at Damascus Simmons was notified by radio| ard before going on to Seward and the time grows shorter the compe- Kodiak. Returning to Anchorage tition is expected to become more from Kodiak, they will fly to Nome, keen, with activity on the part of stopping at Kotzebue to get their the girls and their sponsors being certificates stating that they had speeded up said cyptica okay.” Pan not sengers imm Amer; crossed the Arctic Circle, enroute D Y to Nome. From there, the party The lmf .h will go to Fairbanks, Circle Hot pNA BRINGS FOUR DL a. m. Syrian Springs and Mount McKinley Park etrday). The The Matanuska Valley will also be pASSENGERS HERE' ondy visited stroye They will then travel the Rich- 4 The plane rachi, India, ardson and Alcan Highways in cars TAKES TWELVE OUT have the with New York as its eventual des- lly: “18 hurt, three that the boy was dead and that he | should return to Juneau. The boy's identity was not made SEATiLE, June 19. (A—Ten I halibut vessel owrers have left the | | Fishing Vessels Owners Association positive because of fading com- .,.4 signed the old agreement on munications signals which prevent- |.,¢.py shares, in the dispute which ed a clear message from Betiing nag kept the Seattle fleet idle since througin. Tentative arrangements tye season started May 1, a spokes- | were made with the Charles W. jain said today Twenty-two other Carter Mortuary to care for the yesse] owners, not members, have body and they arc awaiting final )50 signed. " Hachay, | 750 | One of the “outside” boats to ac- | & e g2 . (cept was the schooner Sitka, owned | | by I. Goldstein ;a Juneau merchant, ican officers here did names of the pas-' ediately. ad only meager details which occurred at 2 time (7 p. m. EST ye: plane was reported d wag enroute from Ka- to Istanbul, Further Aid For Overseas Big Ouesllon Senator Vandenberg Makes Suggestion Re- garding MoreSpendmg WASHINGTON, June 19- Senator Vandenberg's proposal for a bi-partisan survey of how much more aid the United States can | | | | | I “safely give foreign countries seems _ assured today of State Department blessing. It is uncertain, however, whether the Department will accept in iull the foreign assistance planning pro- gram laid down last Saturday by the Republican chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee or whether it will suggest some modifications of that plan Undersecretary of State Will ston told a news conference yesterday that so far as Vanden- 1 has to do with the study of American resources and the ability of this country to send further help abrcad he considers it a very wise suggestion. But in so far as determining how much foreign countries need, Clay- ton said, that is a matter which those countries can best determine | themselves, subject to checks by State Department and other Ameri- can econcmic officials abroad. - - i berg’s propos TWINS FOR ALAS S Twin boys, Pewer Lee and Allan and buses. The tour will take in ey ) Whitehorse and the surrounding . ématlon, when e fainect JRIASE HOSPITAL TO HOTEL he said. It sailed from here Tues- | George, were born June 11 to Mr country, including a riverbeat cruise Pacific Nortuern Airlin arriv- b(-ic.nme n.ccc.ssmy g nt. Neyadine, §H 1» Johnson, wlmv was dis- day. On Tuesday, the Deep Sea |and Mrs. Paul S. Swensson, now of down to Dawson. Coming back to 0 Vesterday from Anchorage with s e ”:E ,bmd” o Im.q N charged from St. Ann's Hospital popermens Union again rejected |Tllahee, near Bremerton, Washing Whitehorse, the travellers will take [OUF passengers for Juneau. It left the historic valley of the Euphrates. rfu-ml:;, is registered at the Gas- {HE -AmHn. Gf the. veans! owners‘ton Mbh, Sverkann - the' roither the famous White Pass and Yukon With one for Cordova and 11 for N tineau Hotel. He works for the ro. 915, per cent of the boat shares, | Anne Selfridge of Ketchikan. has Railroad, detouring at Carcross, Ben Anchorage as follows PARKERS REWED Consclidated Mining Co. of Tulse- py o 301 to 38 vote. many friends in Juneau, and her Mychree and a few of the lakes _Juneau to Anchorage: Frank pper p. parker and Jennie Mae quah. ——e—— first boy, Paul, was born here three before arriving at Skagway where Hermann, Hazel Herm il ter, of Gustavus, were remar-| SR S S Mrs. Charles Goldstein, accom- years ago. The father is a former the two yachts, the Aquile and TArrant, Richard Baker, in a wedding ceremony this' The Arden, skippered by Olal papjeq by her granddaughter, Joan | sergeant in the ACS, and was sta- Sueja will pick them up. Baker. 1 morning by U. S..Commissioner Larson, arrived this morning and polginer, has arrived home by PAA | tioned in Sitka and Excursion Inlet | The two yachts will: stop at all _Ocorse Butler, Kenneth Ra¥, poly Gray in Juneau. The Parkers unloaded 22000 pounds of halibut|piane from the south. at that time. the southeastern por including Howard Swain, Vivian Swain, R4y were divoreed last year but recently at the cold storage dock. There were | — — ————— ——— - attle, At Seattle, the party will hold | Raines, Isabelle Alcayaga. jecame reconciled and decided to 1o other unloadings. (s i Sitka, on their way south to Se-! Juneauto Cordova: Hildegard S0- jive together again. A. C. Adams T S TR FR their farewell party at he Olympic 4€™- and Mys, Helen Wamner were wit- ' James J. Burnette and Elsie W Hotel to talk over the trip with . Anchorage to Juneau: Helen yocoes to the marriage. |Hildreth have been issued a mar- Yeakel, Winifred Yeakel, Mae riage license by U. S. Commissioner fond memories. This will be the se- cond trip of its kind that has been | undertaken by the Pan-Pacific! Goced Neighbors Tours. The plan of the tour is to cover as much of Alaska in 60 day s is possible by plane, boat, cars and buses. ‘ The party has quite a schedule to fill in Juneau, siting all points , of interest and beauty. They were | guests of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce at today's luncheon. - e STEAMER MOVEMENTS iv — i Southeastern, from Prince Rupert, | scheduled to arrive this afternoon. Square Sinnel. from Beattle, duet about Monday. ‘ Alaska tied up at Seattle owing to shipping dispute. Princess Norah, from Vancouver, due Saturday afternoon or evening. Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow. Princess Louise scheduled to ar- rive from Skagway at 8 o'clock to- morrow morning and sails south one hour later. Aleutian, from. west, scheduled southbound 7 p.m. Saturday. - CARPENTER WAGE George, Mr. Baysinger. i Your Big Desire In SKIRTS and SWEATERS Is Here CALE Minimum pay of $1.88 per hour for carpenters working on govern- ment projects in the Anchorage area has been recognized as the prevailing wage by U. S. Secretary of Labor Lewis Schwellenbach. Natice of his action was sent today to Michael J. Haas, Territorial Re- presentative of the Department of Labor, from Louis Sherman, Spec- ial Assistant to the Secretary of La- bor. — .- —— ASKS FOR DIVORCE A divorce suit has been filed in U. 8. District Court here by Mar- paret Baldw:n against Donald S. Baldwin charging incompatibility. ‘They were married in Juneau, Aug- ust 22, 1944 and have been separat- ed since October 22, 1944. There are no children. e SOUTH ON BUSINESS George Jorgenson, City Council- man, left by PAA plane yesterday for Seattle on a brief busine: trip, while James Larsen, another member of the City Council, has ust arrived back in Juneau from a brief trip south - LUTHERAN Rummage Sale 10 am June 607-t2 18 Dick Haggerty” has switched to Calvert because Caivert is mellower. 122 Washing 3.8 Proof 44 Distill - Sell it wlh an Emmrc Want-ad! Felix Gray. : NO DOUBT about it— kind of tobacco that 1 OIN US IN UNEAU ULY t FOURTH | J So remember... Women's Asorner | Baranof Hotel Building | It’s the Nicest Store in Town THE TOBACCO AUCTIONEER! "'l SPEAK as an eye-witness when I say that season after season, I’ve seen the makers of Lucky Strike buy fine, npe, mellow leaf...the J. M. Ball, independent tobacco auctioneer of Winston- Salem, N. C., has been a Lucky Strike smoker for 29 years ‘makes a swell smoke.” %7,1/ Ll THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1947 Good Service Good Drivers Ride to Work in Style-Call THE ALASKAN CAB =1 DOUBLE 7 Packard Clippers to Serve You ORVILLE WAGNER PHIL DAWES “To continue your love story live happily ever after with Tnternalional : 0 MANY brides before you have /| s made the same vow: nothing but the first-rate for your brand. new home. ) Come in and marvelat the lovely International Sterling patterns... the wealth of (‘\qumlc detail, lhc truly inspired designs. And isn’t it good news tha International Sterling prices have not been raised?, illus- picce {rom Lovely Enchantress pattern trated costs $22.63 for six place scuin" Many others which to ¢ mou'c. The NUGGET SHOP lucxv‘.fsrmxe Means Fine ToBacco $o Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed —So Free and Easy on the Draw