Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGEEIGHT ™ Public Hearing Removal of To Indian School on Friday COASTAL AIRLINES FLIES 75 PERSONS MONDAY, TUESDAY nes made ) h, B ¥y, on account ¢ bad Yesterday there were more flights to Tu a, one to H kan, Wrangell Planes also cal Wi Spr and Klawock Passeng o Sitka were Mrs Mr. and Mrs. G wood will Raney and Passeng A. Herman, T Brown and Ed Inbound passengers from Sitka were Est Arne Dorum, Jack from Wa Springs, Larry ns, Ma and W from ansen Juneau Jot to her neaux Lil- lian and R V' M. V. Rancy From Hoonah, B. Amatoff, Mr K A Eli Hanlon and F. Rob- ert Norton; from Klawock, Arthur Quick and Dr. E. L. Kelly; from Ketchikan, Olaf Johnson; from Wrangell, Mrs. Mather and Esther Mather. Flying down to Juneau from Tulsequah were H. Douglas, C. Mc- Gregor, M. McDonald, D. O'Bee, W. Giguerre, L. Gillies, Pritz Nel- son, O. Olsen, P. Hewitt, C. Ol- sen, W. Belinski and J. McDougall R NORTHERN VOYAGE IN FROM SEATILE Alaska Transportation Company freighter Northern Voyager, under Capt. Harry Clark, with Fred Clff chief purser, is in port today. She was in Seymour Narrows at the time the recent longshore tie-up ended, and was recalled to Seattle to load cargo for Ketchikan and Juneau. The Northern Vovager brought 300 tons of general cargo, and 120 tons of hay for Juneau. Five automo- biles were included in the load. B CRAFT IS SUNK; SUIT FILED FOR DAMAGES A case has been filed in the U. S. District Court by the Icy Strait Salmon Company against the gas screw vessel Avis and Gilbert and Katherine Mills of Hoonah. The complaint charges that due to fauity navigation the vessel Avis caused (lie sinking of the Thiinkett II last year. The plaintiff asks for $2,000 damages e, ——— BLOOM TAKES MOVIES OF TONGASS FOREST Leaving yesterday via Pan Amedi- can Alrways was Elmer P. Blpom photographer with the U. S. Forest Service. Bloom, who is stationed in Missoula, Montana, has been taking technicolor movies in Tongass Na- tional Forest for the past six weeks He took movies of the resources and possible activities within the forest reserve. ) —within easy reach by fast 4-engine Clipper — Fly in swift comfort aboard the big, 4-mile-a-minute Clippers . . . serving Alaska on frequent schedules. Enroute, settle back in your comfortable lounge seat and enjoy 8 world- famous service.. ncluding delicious hot meals, as part of your Flying Clipper fare. Consult Pan Americas - - - BARANOF HOTEL Telephone 106 PAN AHERICAN. Worto AIRHAYS Tl Syeem of heTyng Clppers “le Moly- Regarding | First Graders The Juneau Public School Board that a meeting will be held Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock in the Study Hall of the Juneau High School for the purpose of giv- ing information to any interested perasns in regard to the transferral of the first grade pupils from the Fifth Street school to the Willough- by Avenue school. Following the presentation of the plans already chnsidered by the board and the presentation by the board of information which determ- ¢ ined its course of action, any person having a plan which he feels to be superior to the one being followed will be given an opportunity to present it. This is the announcement made today by the Juneau School Board throgh Edwin C. Clark, Superin- endent of Schools. S et NURSERY SCHOOL IS 10 BE CONDUCTED AT GOVERNOR'S HOUSE Ernest Gruening Has rsked all mothers interested in send- their childre: ) the cooperaiive ergarten sponsored by the Am- Women's Voluntary Service, act either Mrs. C. E. Albrecht, Mrs. Brooks Hanford, or herself. A meeting will be held at the Gov- s House Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock to discuss plans for the nursery school which will be con- ducted Monday through Friday from 1 to 5 o'clock nyone interested is urged to attend. — e, - FREDERICK HARRIS IS DADDY OF BABY GIRL to Mr A daughter was born and Mrs. Froderick Harris in St Ann's Hospital this morning. The baby, who weighed six pounds and four ounces, is the first child of the Harris'. She is the great- granddaughter of Mr. Richard Harris, co-founder of the town of Juneau The new father is his father, John the Harris Sign Com- associated with in Harrls, pany iyl VISITOR FROM PORTLAND B. A. Barton, of Hyattsville, Md., is staying at the Baranof Hotel Tiwo-way stretch body fabric with short log for Upper thiph control. Pantia Girdlee. ™ REIRRR——— Treo-way stretch body fabric with com- fortable contour fitting Jeatures. Medium, Large S Fashion knit elastic Sabric which molds with a firm control. Small, TEVEN One of Alaska’s Exceptional Stores on the ceremonial pilgrimage will be Kendall L. Howe, Assistant Ra- ‘SHRINERS COMING | ban; James Fletcher, Oriential NORTH- F'Fw ARE | Guide; Frank T. Ostrander, Re- (] | corder, and Leon Sutter, Director of the Second Section. They will Io BE I“IIIAIED return next Tuesday. They made a similar trip to Alaska last year and also initiated a class at Ketch- ikan last June. SR S R IR SEATTLE, Sept. 24—(®—Jo D. Cook, Potentate cf Nile Temple and four other Shriners will fly to Anchorage in a Northwest Air- HERE FROM KETCHIKAN iines plane tomorrow to assist in| William Bates and Olaf Johnson, initiating a class of 50 into the| both of Ketchikan, are staying at order over the weekend. Others!the Baranof. U. S. DEPARTMENY OF CUMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALAS¥A WEATHER BULLETIN THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA jowns | Roundup, Two Visitors Gef Bear Bag Two more brownles have fallen before the fire of visitors from the outside. H. C. Jorgenson, cattle rancher, and C. M. McGuin, who a sporting goods store at Montana, bagged two “medium-sized” bears on Admir- ~lalty Island. The hunters, guided by John Harris and Buck Harris, spent a week at Windfall Harbor and Gam- bier Bay, traveling aboard the Frederick F, with Bud Lindstrom acting as skipper and chief cook. McGuin dropped his seven and a half foot quarry with one shot at 50 yards. Jorgenson shot twice from 100 yards to bring down a bruin estimated to stand at seven and a half feet. He came much closer to one bear though, as he and a brownie “too small to take” stood in the middle of a stream eyeing each other at a distance of 20 feet |The bear gave in first, and walked DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M, 120TH MERIDIAN TIME Max. temp. | TODAY last | Lowest 4:30am. 24hcs. Weather at Station 24 hrs* | temp. temp. Precip. 4:30 am. Anchorage 48 38 38 69 Rain Barrow e e Trace Cloudy | Bethel 52 3 Trace Cloudy | Cordova 57 46 50 118 Rain | Dawson 48 35 35 0 Cloudy { Edmonton 48 | 33 33 14 Clear Fairbanks 51 28 38 ‘Trace Rain Haines 52 ho 50 Trace Foggy Havre 2 42 Cloudy ! Juncau Airport 55 48 48 02 Drizzle and Fog | Ketchikan 66 51 51 0 Fog Kodiak 51 48 29 0 Cloudy Burbank 84 i McGrath 4O 36 38 Trace Rain Nome 43 27 33 0 Cloudy Northway 45 35 35 Cloudy Petersburg 55 40 49 0 Foggy | Portland 55 51 51 0 Clear Prince George n 41 0 Prince Rupert 51 Seattle 81 54 54 0 Cloudy Sitka 59 52 53 01 Foggy Whitehorse 56 51 45 0 Clear Yakutat 56 50 50 01 Cloudy *—(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) WEATHER SYNOPSIS: A trough of low pressure continues from a low center located northwest of Alaska across the Alaska Peninsula into the Gulf of Alaska and then southward into lower latitudes of the Pacific Ocean. This has caused a southerly flow of air over the Guif of Alaska and rain is falllng this morning as far northward as Fairbanks, Alaska. Rain fell during the past 24 hours at most stations over southwest Alaska and along the coast from Juneau to the Alaska Penin- sula and over the Plain States and Prairie Provinces of northern United States and southern Canada. It is warmer this morning over the interior of Alaska with temperatures everywhere above freezing, below freezing temperatures were reported over the northern portion of Alaska. Tem- peraturcs averaged above normal over Southeast Alaska vesterday. They ranged from 45 to 58 degrees along the coast from Puget Sound to the Gulf of Alaska this morning. MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports from Marine Stations at 1:30 P. M. today WIND Height of Waves Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) Cape Spencer Cloudy 53 ENE 16 Calm Eldred Rock Pt. Cloudy 55 Calm Zero Point Retreat Fog 50 Calm : . Five Finger Light Fog 49 NE 8 1 foot ! Lincoln Rock Cloudy 54 Nw 8 Guard Island Cloudy 59 NW 1 Zero Cape Decision Cloudy 53 w 2 Zero MARINE FORECAST FOR PERIOD ENDING THURSDAY EVE- NING: Outside waters, Sitka to Yakutat and Cross Sound-Icy Strait area —winds easterly and southeasterly 10 to 15 mies per hour increasing to 15 to 25 miles per hour by Thursday. Protected waters of Southeast Alaska and the outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Sitka—variable winds 15 miles per hour or less. Partly cloudy with fog forming in channels tonight and cloudvy Thursday with some rain in northern portion of South- edst Alaska Thursday «+.FOR SMOOTH iy, WILL SUBTRACT INCHES FROM THE HIPLINE 70 GLORIFY YOUR FALL WARDROSB The fashioned features of the tile Vassarette girdles and pantie girdles will give you a calm, collected and comfortably controlled ‘i‘uu. ver There !iu“c for every figure type. Many styles in your {avorite shades | ., 4 S rette ‘irl]e or pantie N . “The House of Swansdown” slowly away. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1947 THREE FEATHERS THE AMERICAN WHISKEY PAR EXCELLENCE McGuin and Jorgenson are leav- ing today for Anchorage for a week's hunting on the Kenai Pen- ‘insula. They are after moose and ‘more bears. | Both men are making their first |trip to Alaska and McGuin has | already decided that he would like |to live here. He even conceded that Alaska halibut is almost as good as Montana's Rainbow trout. ———eee —— EMBLEM (LUB TO ELECT THURSDAY The meeting of the Juncau Em- blem Club has been announced for Thursday night a 8 o'clock. An election will be held, and other important business discussed Members are requested to take any children’s clothing which they e o e S Py 2 THREE FEATHERS ‘IS"IIII"“. INC. Empire State Building, New York, U.S. A, are willing to give away, if it is BLENDED in good condition ENDED WHISKEY. 86 PROOF, 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS _ 0228 Hazel McLeod, Genevieve Rush- e 1 ot 3.8 i Eeis- AR er and Daisy Fagerson are in s charge of the entertainment for BUSINESS MEETING MACHINISTS' LOCAL NO. 514 Thursday, Sept. 25, Moose Hall, 8 P. M. the evening. B e — FROM TENAKEE Sam Asp, canneryman of Tenakee, is staying at the Maranof Hotel. CUST furniture, in specifications latest designs FURN Designed Just for You Made “just for YOU,” we build a single object, your family budget. Thus you may select from our such charming reproductions of your favorite heirloom as will revive fond memories of your you may own and enjoy OM-BUILT FURNITURE as new as tomorrow, or styled to match a favored heirleom An Alaska Enterprise This business was founded in Ju- neau during 1945 with the conviction that Alaska NEEDED local enter- prise. Its growth has demonstrated the soundness of that belief. Thus, our services in the manufacture and upholstery of furniture have been part of Juneau’s recent growth. Wide experience enables the Houstons to offer quality furniture, into which is buiit the maximum of dollar value. or a complete set of accordance* with your and within the range of or let us create for you yesteryears. HELPS TO MAKE A HOUSE A HOME ITUR JUNEAU UPHOLSTERY COMPANY. 122 Second Street Telephone - 36 "Things Produced For Alaskans IN ALASKA Help Create a Greater Alaska FOR ALASKANS”®