The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 13, 1947, Page 2

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PAGE TWO OVER Skyway's FLAME pattern HAT AND Skyway's SHOE CASE FLAME pattern $29.75 plus tax WARDROBE CASE $29.75 plus tax ok vy fashions these travel cases to stay lovely — on bt 2 the exclusive Unitron foundation, a single-piece frame i o ‘H % formed and fused under electronic heat. { o That is why we proudly offer Skyway luggage as regular ! - Jlus tax open stock. You may start a matched travel set today with one or more cases . . . add to the pieces any time. any eason. And know each case will travel beautifully through | the years ahead. The coverings of these cases are tough two-ply canvas. ( Firmly stitched bindings are top-grain cowhide. Locks | are solid brass. Eight models, to meet every travel need. . *s FLAME pattern SUREL % SKYWAY is the registered trademark of the Skyway $19.50 plus tax Luggage Company for luggage and travel cases R.M ,Bsétslzdi Co QuALITY SINCE /887 A resid background treaty received fir Reme). BOATING to that A "ONE. an 800-pound tuna they have netled and (ake it to a commercial canning plant, — Three part ¢ husky his oxcart across the lrun(ll line vmsrk(‘r in right of g [17] = o =3 q — Yugoslav territery when the Italian peace flag decorates cart. SEN CAIN SAYS EISENHOWER 1S lar mastery “of and political.” | Cain, in a radio (WEAM) inter- | view, declined otherwise to com- jment on the developing drive iamong some Republicans to nomi- nate the Army Chief of Staff for things militar: | President. Eisenhower is to be- | come President of Columbia Uni- versity next year. | The West Coast Senator also was asked about the adequacy of | Alaskan defenses against the pos- | sibility of an attack by Russia | He replied: i3 i | “I would say that the defenses Alaska are keeping pace with | the needs and the demands of the .day in which we live. I, as a citi- |zen and not a Senator, was very much encouraged by what I saw g | going on in those northern lands % ‘m ours.” Cain was in Alaska for several | weeks recently. He said that “if trouble comes,” Alaska would be the first point of attack. { —e- | NORMA ZUMWALT RETUR Norma, the daughter of Pastor and Mrs. A. L. Zumwalt of the Seventh-Day Adventist church of this city returned home last eve- ning on the Princess Louise. Norma, a sophomore at Walla Walla Col- | lege, has returned to help her fa- ther in the mission office and work of the church. Her return home was made ne- | cossary because of the illness of Mrs. Zumwalt’s parents. The Elder and Mrs. Christensen live in the Yakima Valley. Mr. Christensen is | retired minister of the denomina- tion. It has not been decided just how soon Mrs. Zumwalt will leave |for the states. i —— - | OLSEN OFF FOR NORWAY { Enroute to Bergen Norway, Sig- |urd Olsen left on the Aleutian. He | will leave from New York on Octo- Iber 31 on the Gripsholm and will ‘spend several months visiting his pnxems in Bergen. Olsen works for ® Wirephoto via radio from Nova Scotia fishermen struggle to bring aboard | the city. His trip was arranged by | the Alaska Travel Bureau. —fl—‘fl:suunm | . 600D LANDIDATE' Also Says Alaskan De-| U. S. District Attorney P. J. Gil- in Seattle. His headquarters are at ’ . more, J ft last night rn board ' Anchorage. fenses ‘Keeping Pace !we s S ateutian tor Ketenikan Cdeu . 5 where ne will resume his (lulh.s at HERL FROM CALIFORNIA Wlfh NeedS, Demands tae fall court term there. He is John Bilker, Jr, of Richmond, | ol expected to return here Dec. 1. Calif,, is staying at the Gastineau. | WASHINGTON, Ot PR e = lebaie L B “'R_a‘;sh’“'*id\ GROSS ON TRIP _ FROM NOME | about: ‘General D\ngm. 2 E’;i - Mr. and Mrs. Zalmain Gross left O. Gudbranson of Nome is stop- B RE L 5" Prasiianbal ,fifi on board the Aleutian for Ketchi- | Png at the Gastineau. I Sala At few hen h"wepm A kan to begin a one week inspection | IR i A % ol ave 2 HERE FROM SEWARD UNEAU, ALASKA § Operalor of Alaska . - Sawmill Gefs Fined 'HENS—A spokesman for the| <IN U. S. Embassy said that Reps. Olin| SEATTLE, Gct. 13.—/P—Federal, E. Teague (D-Texas) and Donald judge Lloyd L. Black has imposed, Jackson (R-Calif) were fired on by a $7.500 fine on Jred V. Wagner mortars today north of Kilkis near owner of the American-Aslatic the Bulgarian border. Neither was ~vading Company, lumber jobbers| injured. Teague and Jackson are after W pleaded guilty tol members of the U. S. House Sub- violating OPA lumbe gulations | | committee on Foreign Affairs, which by making 0 totaling al is on a survey tour of various $3,400. ~Wagr European nations, sawmill at | | 1 LAKE SUCCESS — Russia today GRIBBLE VISITING HERE |lost her fight to have the United | '\’\(lm)~ order immediate withdraw-| Visiting i Juneau this week isi 2l of American and British troops Harold Gribble, Boy Scout Field executive from Anchorage, who has | frem Greece. The Russians also lost k= | | | on a move to have the UN lay been attending the meeting of Boy | me for the Balkan troubles on Scout hwm-w at the Un :‘N‘\] the United States, Britain and of Indiana in Bloomington. He will] Itm ce. attend the meetings with the Dis- | 1l - trict Committee of Boy Scouts that | WASHINGTON — President Tru- aré scheduled for this week. | man has wired the governors of the oo 48 states asking for their coopera- ARRIVE | tion in the food conservation cam- | {paign. Mr. Truman has asked each The MS Brown Bear and (hf'i | governor to appoint an individual MS Eider, U. 8. Fish and ‘Wwildlife | lor a group to work with the Citi- Service vessels, arrived here ::nx“ zens Food Committee to organize morning from the westward. | he activity in each The Brown Bear, with (T:mlzun‘ | R Daniel Drotning, has been in the | SAN FRANCISCO — The Ninth Aleutian Islands. The Eider, with | {U. S, Girouit. Court of Appeals to- Captain Harold J. Hurd, has been | day affirmed the mansl ter at Kodiak. | | conviction of Walter E. McRaye, Both ves will leave soon f | seldovia, Alaska, fisherman, Seattle to receive their annual win- | i enced to 12 years in prison for tér overhauls ‘ kiling another fisherman in a = - — | ‘r,unul over a woman. JEAN KIBBEY ARRIVES i ' Mrs, Jean Kibbey returned to Ju- TIAGO (,hw al miners neau on the Princess Louise and | ‘aro said to have been ordered to willk make her home with her par I return to their jobs by Wednesday ents Mr. and Mrs, George Ande ‘or face court martial for open re- scn. She hi been living for the bellion against the Chilean govern- past two years in New York City. | ' ment | EPTG. O - e 1 WALTER KING IN JUNE!/ ¢ PEIPING — Chinese Nationalist Walter B. King, prominent at- troops are said to have forced Com- torney of Ketchikan, and Il»rmvx“ munist scldiers back from two resident ot Juneau, ved via El {points in Manchuria—at the port of plane today on a professional visit. | | Yingkow and the Mukden-Chang- | - .o - chun railway town of Szepingkai LORENZENS RETURN "w\)—]\m-ngkp ) Adjutant and Mrs. Henry Loren- | —_— zen, of the Salvation Army, return- WASHING i UN — The Supreme c:l here last night with their five | Court today upheld its decision that children on board the Princess \$he. Peaeral. government has | fifst < Loulse, They have: been. abiseny for rights. to- oil jin<lnalying: beneath [{1tfe. WEEkE On. & yacation.to Te- | the waters off the California coast. | "™, Wash | - - oy | KATHRYN APLAND ARRIV | LAKE SUCCESS — Russia I:Ire‘i first grade tea- joined the United States in | it Schools, Kathryn Apland, cher in the Juneau Public ':‘”‘1" ng in principle a proposal returned on the Princess Lou'se | for partition of Palestine into se- delayed in her return by psrate Jewish and Arab countries in the family. Mrs. Tom Sel- ! o by has been substituting for her | WOODWORKING, CARVING luntil her arrival. Miss Apland, who GROUPS ARE TO MEET is from Seattle, has taught for two ON TUESDAY EVENING years in Juneau. = >se — The Woodworking and Carving | HERE FOR WINTER Group of Alaskan Arts and Crafts| Donald W. Erickson, Fish .and will meet in the High School shop Wildlife Agent for the Bristol Bay area. arrived here Saturday from on Tuesday eve October 14 at 7:30 o'clock. Persons interested in any form of woodworking or carv- lnng are invited to attend this meet- | ing. Henry Harmon will explain the | and the care Naknek. He will be assigned in Ju- neau durmp, the winter months. L eeo FROM ANCHORAGE George Black, Fish and Wildlife {Agent for the Cook Inlet area, ar- | rived here Saturday for a brief v it enroute to a special assignment general use of a shop of tcols - -re GILMORE LEAVES trip of the Gross interests in SE! L. Cosentimo of Seward is regist- ered at the Gastineau. —————————— FROM VICTORIA S. C. Carey of Victoria, JOYER TO KETCHIKAN | stopping at the Gastineau. Vernon Joyer, of the U. S. Forest BTN sl S Service Fiscal Office, left here last FROM TACOMA night on board the S. S. Aleutian,| L. L. Vance of Tacoma is stay- | to audit the books of the Forest INg at the Baranof. Service office at Ketchikan. He ex- pects to be absent for a week. LIRS E i Alaska. They will return Friday on board the Alaska and will continue on the Alaska to Haines, Skagway and Sitka. H AR ST B.C. is HERE FROM Mrs. B. Park of Seward is stop- | ping at the Baranof Hotel. POLICE COURT NEWS - -, Heino Otto Klemola was fined IN TOWN $25 and given a 20 day suspended Percy jail sentence today by City Magis- staying trate William A. Holzheimer on his 2 second arrest for drunkenness with- ‘ NOME COUPLE HERE in the past week. John Houts for-( Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Wright of feited $25 bail on a drunk charge Nome are at the Hotel Juneau. and was released. 1 —— - ! FROM KETCHIKAN HERE FROM PHILADELPHIA : T. R. Curtis of Ketchikan is stop- Charles Van Hoosen of Philadel- ping at the Gastineau. phia is <l1ving at the Barmmf ———- JUKEAU PLUMBINE & HEATING CO PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL PH(IHE 87 J. Shanks of Fairbanks is at the Baranof. - Third and Franklin 2 o s ! l EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED T . DR.D.D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Second and Franklin Junean PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS _—_——_———-—-———d | ELLIS T ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TC RETCHIKAN via Pelersburg and Wrangell With cennections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle ' FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 ————————————————————————————eeemd) MONDAY, OCTOBER 13 Child Prodigy 1947 Jackie Wilken, who rece schoo! at Hollyweod, € 1if. s of starting pre He has h rnia when he's 13. (” Wirephoto. lml Bl'l( kie, watches. The way to SEATTLE? By CLIPPER of course! The Flying Clippers are Alaska’s most frequent, time-saving link with Seattle. Aboard the 4-engine Clippers you ride swiftly and in comfort . . . enjoy delicious meals aloft. And you save 10% on the round trip. For information and reser- American — world’s most ex- vations, see Pan perienced airline. BARANOF HOTEL Telephone 106 AP Twrenal [{/flfi’lfl Ammm' o= Haing K/M.u “"HOW'D YOU LIKE 70 ¢UT DIESEL REPAIRS 50% 2" Folks using RPM DELO, the Diescl Engine Lubricating Oil that stretches time between overhauls, say it cuts repairs as much as 507%. And that’s right, nughbors~~RPVl DELO Oil protects your Diescl, gives it longer life. C ()Irp()und; in RPM DELO Oil make it stop rmg -sticking and cor- rosion, cut carbon and sludge, stick to hot spots. The Navy uses it, to0. Try it today! \ T. li. BDYER Branen Manager Telephone 280

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