Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWU THE DAILY ALAbKA I:MPIRL4J NLAU ALASKA TUESDAY, bLPTl:MBhR 2, 19 47 3-Piece Sifs . 17 PASSENGERS ARE FLOWN HERE BY PAA The Pan American Airways Ilew 65 passengers to Seattle on Satur- day’s flight. On the northbound flight on the same day, they flew 27 passengers to Juneau from Seattle. From Juneau to Seattle were: Regina Mendel, Barbara Hudson, Sylvia Metedlfe, Roberta Goodwin, Ruth Richard, John Richard. | Lorraine English, Frank Hagney, | Theodore Mutscher, Garry Garrétt, | Lena Gilmore: Ro'¢rt Fellows, Mary Fellows, | Robert Ogdon, Judy Ogdon, Beth | Ogdon, Zatls Murphy, Lois y |and infant Janea. Wilfred Beauc.n, iay Thompson, | Emil Manela, Al Lindstrom, Adolph PE'(mwn Howard Tibbes, Carl Ol- =en Bert Crater, Peter Neilson, John Hmllcm low Wilson, Charles Ness, Dick ght, Andrew Brizzolari, Ed on, Rav Gtlseth, M. C. Snyder, 4 Johnson, Mts. A. Pearmain, Eiiéen Pearmain, Charles Pearmain. | Elizabeth Horrp, Fred Nyerman, ! Florgnce Lipsky, Dorothy Ames, H. W. Kissling, H. W. Kissling, Jr., |Louise Van Hemert, Thomas Mc- {Grail, Coleta McGrail and infant Thomas, and 17 fishermen. zado, Emric Stimac, Gerald Likness, Dale Van Wald, Keith Roberts, Clem Kruger, Art Mingeaud, Lawrence | Twidwell, Oscar Granquist. ‘ Seattle to Juneau: Audrey Hill, Cliff McDonald, Jean McDonald, | Joseph Toman and infant Jeanne, ( m-?_'!‘oman Nick Bez, Eleanor { i Talbot, Gwen Staright, Mary Yeager | 3 and infant Christine, Mrs. F. Chris- | A OVE tianson, Othu Reads, Eric Tyrone. ‘ Juneau to Fairbanks: James An- | derson, Sister Mary Rosalia, Sister | Mary Ann Dolores, Neil Murphy,; ‘'Wilfred Johnson, Katherine John- " g [the new White House planc and RYAN Wil Amgxns' $DAY |a brand new mornnmcal toy. He Dr. Jamcs CA Ryan, Territorial was in and out of the control rcom during most of the trip from Washington, and on one visit the | Presiddnt said: “It's got more gadzets Commissioner of Education, will | ©OUNUY S@reC L speak to the Woman's Soclety of | R A ’f “.\_1y Christian Service of the Methodisy | B0, Was in a festive : Church at - thelr regulaf mofithly | the President's amval‘. Huge red, husiness and program meeting on |white and blue posters lined the Wednesdiy @ 8 p.m, streets, bearing the slogan, “Hail Mrs. Henrv Leege will be in charge of the devotions, Worship Chairman Mrs. Don Miller announces and Mrs. | Charfés ¥bpejoy, chairmah of ‘re- | freshments; has appointéd Mrs. Les- Truma offfes clerks and fac- tory workers wer> given a half- |lie Sturm and Mrs. Fritz Johnson hostesses for the evening. \day off. Twenty-thousand Braz- : A revort will be made on the iilian troops were stationed along istudy groups' activitles, dnd otHer (Continuzd from Page One) | than & mood for Ithe route the President followed" to the American Embassy, whetb he will stay for thie first five da¥ys of his visit .- —— IT WILL PAY YOU TO SHOP HOME BEAUTIFUL BEFORE, YOU BUY! CU.HTA;N S DRAPEP.IES RUGS - CARPETS Soft Goods Gift Items FURNITURE Baby Cribs - Pens - Baths TABLE APPLIANCES > @ @ @ & g .|IIIIIIIIIII!llIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINI!IIIII|IIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIllllmlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIln. | Seattle to Juneau: Perry A. Parks, | !1da Parks, Fay Parks, Gara Parks, | PORTLAND MEN HERE projects such as the Brownies, spon- !sored by the society. that will do magic for { S . & your figure. They come in Slrlmwr cloth. Col- ors are Brown, Aqua, 'y and Black. Sizes, H) s to 18's. $27. 50 a suit Exira Halermly Skirt $7.95 B Rehtends Co QUALITY SINCE 7887 DOUGLAS | NEWS | SCHOOLS OPEN | The Douglas Public Schools open- | ed this morning at 9:30 o'clock for | registration and enrollment o pupils. At 11:30 children were dis- | missed. A school facuity mesting | was scheduled for 1 o’clock p.m. | X LCDCE MEETS | GASTINEAT The first Stated Communication of Gastineaux Lodge No. 124, F. and | A. M. is to be held this evening in | the Eagles Hall, starting the fall| sk after a three-month summer (Ing | NEW RESIDENT Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Robinson and three children moved into their | new home on St. Ann's Avenue over the weekend. Their home is the first to be built of ten which the Juneau Soruce Corporation is crect- ing for its employees. Mr. Robinson is an automatic trimmerman for the mill, and is formerlv of Coos Bay, Oregon. Their two bovs and one 3irl are all of school age and enrolled this morning in the first, b"rond 'md third grades. | FRASERS HOME Mrs. Robert Fraser and daughter, Miss Bunte Fraser, were homebound engers on the Princess Louise turday evening. They had spent a six-week vacation visiting with other members of the family in Washington. Mrs. Fraser is in charge of the Douglas telephone office and Miss Fraser is on the switchboard staff RETURNS TO SEATTLE Mrs. Ray Spurgeon and da Coral left via PAA plane on Sunday morning for their Seattle home after spending the summer months in Douglas with Mr. Spurgeon, fore- man at the Douglas Canning cannery. Miss Spurgeon is to en- roll in the Seattle Public Schools lll'.\‘TERS—FlSllEKME,\' ouT Most cf the male population of Douglas were out over the three-day holiday, despite the weather, urying their luck for the biggest fish on Sunday and going into the hills on Monday for a sight of a buck deer. No favorable reports are circulating as yet. HERE FR()“ FAIRBANKS Mrs. Glenn Franklin and daughter Ina arrived over the weekend from Fairbanks via PAA. They will make Their home with Mrs. Franklin's mother, Mrs. Gust Wahto, during the winter while Mr. Franklin will remain at his mining properties near Fairbanks until the freeze-up. Miss Ina is to attend the Douglas schools again this year POORS HOME 1 ‘The Val Poor: ¢ now home after a two months’ vacation in the States which took them over about 15,000 miles of countrv. Their trip took them east to Detroit and south to Tiajuana, Mexico. Taking their four young children on this trip, they enjoyed the vacation but have com: home to rest they say. This was | the family’s firct trip Outside since coming to Alaska in 1939. Several | Douglas peovle visited were Guy | Smith of Seattle, Flovd Williamsons | of Kirkjand, Wash., Ed Baratichs of Sumner, Wash., John Ellmans, also uf Sumner, Art Westons of Buckley. { Wash.. Tom Jensens of Minneapolis 1Sam Devonof Zenith, Wash. The Guy Smiths are well and have a beautiful home in Seattle. Wil- liamsons have a thriving cabinet shop. Ellmans own a shoe repair shop. Weston is a plumbing con- tractor. Jensen have a baby boy and Sam Devon looks and feel fine. All send their greetings. e — FISHING NEWS Four packers and four troliers landed cargoes of saimon at the {Juneau Cold Storage dock this morn- i John Martinson on the Isis brought in 18,000 pounds of salmon for Alaska Coast Fisheries. All of the following boats sold to Sebastian-Stuart: Albert Wallace cn the Alrita, with 11,000 pounds; Clar- ence Moy on the Tillacum, 15,000 pounds; Stan Thompson on the Nui- sance III, 12,000 pounds. Ole Bransdahl on the troller Ford, 2200 pounds; Carl Baker on the Sadie. 2,200 pounds; Raymond Reed on the troller 31-A-330, 600 pounds; tand Carl Westby on the troller 31- B-231, ,.,000 pounds. D LORRAINE ENGLISH SOUTH Miss Lorraine English, daughter of Mrs. W. A. English, left by PAA | Saturdn_\' for Seattle after spending her summer vacation here. Miss English will enter her final year at the Holy Names Academy in Seattle, graduating next June. e TSI ALL LEGIONNAIRES Special meeting TONIGHT at 7:30 sharp! Important. Be there. Earl Belford, Iréne Cornue, Graham | | Meyers, Dickie ! Dockendorff. Jack Fay, Evelyn Barton, Florence | Hobbs. Dick Fdlta, Ruth Folta, Mrs. | ! Carl Weidman, Mrs. Emily Penrsnn‘ Paul Pearson, David Pearson. | Helen Ewart, Genevieve Mayberry, Bob Woods, Sidney Thompson, John | Tanner, George Rapuzzi, Mrs. J. M. Austin, June Schulz, Minna Cough- lin. On Sunday's flights, Pan Ameri- | 'an flew 16 passengers to Juneau and 39 to Seattle. From Seattle to Juneau: Sommers, Esther Sommers, Biennan, Sarah Brennan., Edward Prostrom, Frank Maier, Don Mc- Morran, Don Wiley. Marjorie Wiley, Shirley Mauwis- sen, Robert Sommers, Jr., J. Sofoulis, Virginia Austin, Thelma Leff and infant Francis, John Keating, Mar- garet Hatfield. Juneau to Seattle: J. E. Mundine, | Dr. Emily Pierson, Ann Pierson, ! Edith Potter, John McCallum, Mary ! Whiteley, Eugene Swanson, Evans, Virginia Evans. Josephine Goodman, John Good- man. Barbara Goodman, Swift, Marcia Kent, Marcia Soskim, Margaret Roberts. Bonnie Ward, Miles Meyer, Luella Spurgeon, Coral Spurgeon, Frank DeGanahl. Mrs. Mary Prazier, Harriet Robert Giovahetti, Keith Wildes,, Ideal Wildes, Florence Kaut- | man. Gerald Kaufman. White, Gilbert Sundman, Emil Rich- | ter, Frances Richter. Harold Mayo, Patricia Mayo, Ci- cely Cuzner, Mrs. Matt Norem, Tom | Pugh, Tox Axland, Halddin Han- son, Alex Petersen, Thomas Mac- Donald. On yesterday’s flights they carried 39 passengers to Seattle and six to Fairbanks. On the northbound flight, they brought 12 in from Seattle. They also flew 52 members of the Outdoor Writers Association to Whitehorse. From Juneau to Seattle: Ruth Tisdale, Virginia Holmstrom, Her- bert Cuff, Don Max Foster, Bill Stokes. | W. E. Butts, Florence Frederick- son and infant Sharvl, Sylvia Fred- | i erickson, Roy Gray, Hallie Nelson, A. M. Mill, Betty Smith. | Ceorge Livingston, Paul Shrenk, | Harry Sommers, V. Saporozan, Rob- ert L. Billiland, E. E. Bach, Leo Storm, Dorothy Cole, Don McKin- non. Grace Wakefield, Dorothy Wake- field, Don Wakefield, Mary Margaret Wakefield, Jene Wakefield, Ella Mae Wakefield. Robert Robinson, John Canoni- ! v { The Triangle Clea ners No Matier How You... Figure, you'll cut a trimmer figure when you wear garments dry cleaned the effi- cient Triangle way! CLOSED SATURDAY AFTERNOON “For Better Appearance” CA LL Teo | David | Lloyd | ) AT BSTEL UNEAU . Hallman, of Forks, Wash., is sln}m[‘ at the Hotel Juneau. I' S. DEPA“I‘MFV'I “OF com JUNEAU, DATA FOR %3 HOURS ENDED AT Max. temp. | last 24 hrs.* | 55 39 47 53 62 8 62 55 84 55 59 52 51 107 55 46 60 56 90 69 Station | Anchorage i | Barrow Bethel | Cordova | Dawson Edmohton | Fairbaiks iHaines Havre | Juneau Airport Ketchikan Kodiak Kotzebue |Los Angeles McGrath Nome Northway | Petersburg | Portland | Prince George | Prince Rupert 59 Sesttle 8 18! 59 | Whnehm se 57 Yakutat. 53 —(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. | Lowest 4:30am. 24h. temn. 46 35 R. W. Irish and D. H. Robertson of General Air Cargo Company at Portland, are staying at the Baranof Hotel. ROE, WEATHER BUREAU ALASYZA WEATHER BULLETIN 4:30 A. M,, i20TH MERIDIAN TIME TODAY s, Precip. Weather at 4:80 am. Cloudy Drizzle Clear Rain Showers Pt. Cloudy temp. 46 35 Cloudy Rain Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Rain Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Rain Drizzle and Foz | Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy m. today) WEATHER SYNOPSIS: A trough _of high pressure extends from a George | 1oy center over horthwestern Alaska hsoutheastward to another low | | center in the Gulf of Alaska this morhing. A high pressure is located Southeast Alaska. Temperatures were slightly above Weather Pt. Cloudy Rain Rain-Fog ...Rain Station Cape Spencer Eldred Rock Point Retreat Five Finger Light NING: Protected waters of miles per hour. “YoU'tt WHISTLE water, and soft dirt—you’ve Wheel Bearings.” about a thousand miles west of northérn California. tribution has caused a flow of southerly to southwesterly air across This was attended by cloudiness and rain showers. Rain has also fallen during the past 24 hours over western Alaska, ihe interior of Alaska and at scattcred points over southwestern Canada. Temp. | Dixon Entrance to Yakutat—souther]y to south Cloudy with occasional light rain. FRANCES BERG POPULAR PIANO Keyboard Harmony and Arranging APPROVED BY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION for VETERANS’ TRAINING under G. L. BILL PHONE: BLACK 604 WHILE YOUR WHEEL BEARINES WO Let your wheels slosh through mud, worry when RPM Wheel Bearing Grease is protecting your bearings. It seals out foreign matcer, stays in bearing resec- voirs for long periods, won't melt, creep into brakes or leave wear-spots dry. Free Booklet:” How to Service and Lubricate 3outheast nor! 'mal yesterday over Alaska and ranged from 46 to 54 degrees along the coast frem Puget Sound to the Gulf of Alaska this morning. MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports from Marine Stations at 1:30 P. M. today (Sea Condition) Height of Waves 2 feet 3 feet 1 foot 4 feet Dir. and Vel. WIND S 16 SE 16 SE 12 S 22 53 49 50 51 MARINE FOREC.AST FOR PERIOD ENDING WEDNESDAY EVE- Southeast Alaska and the ou side waters, isterlv winds 15 to 25 Ot nary a This pressure dis- | ! Spreads - Blankets - Shees RADIOS - RECORDS NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE AT SURPRISINGLY LOW PRICES Phone 394 Goldstein Building ‘"lIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIHIIIIIllIIIIIIIlIIIIlIIl||||IIIIIIIHIII!lIlIHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllmlmlmlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII" DIAMONDS whose perfect glow will remind iis proud owner, for years to come, of your wise choice of the . . . perfect gift. TWO convenient daily flights to SEATTLE by Plying Clipfer Travel in swift comfort by big, 4-engine Clipper- You'll save valuable time . .. arrive in Seattle re- laxed and ready for busi- ness or fun. For details and Clipper s to anywhere A NOMINAL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD YOUR GEM UNTIL YOU DESIRE DELIVERY For GIFTS of a LIFETIME,‘See The NUGGET SHOP Now in the Simpson Building Come in and browse around reservation: in the world, ask . . . BARANOF HOTEL Telephcne 103 T. H. DYER Branch Manager Telephone 280 PIANOS-ORGANS KIMBALL - SOHMER - EVERETT - CABLE NELSON - IVES - POND Estey Organs-Pedal and Motor Driven NOwW AVAILABLE! Slring and Band Instruments KAY MARTIN SELMER OLDS BUNDY REYNOLDS Insirument Repair ulnon ATTACHE! Musical Sifiplieé : Piano Tuning Aleutian Censervafory Music Siore (Member National Association of Music Merchants) TERRITORIAL HAMMOND ORGAN DEALERS Our Representative Will Soon Be in Your City Waich for Announcement WRITE FOR FREE LITERATURE Box 1296 Anchorage, Alaska