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1 P.M. Edition “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE[m-] = VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,767 JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1947 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS —— OUTDOOR CHRISTMAS DOWNTOWN JUNEAU FISHING BOATS ON Be“flehem DECORATIONS GLOW WEARS CHRISTMAS IN MANY SECTIONS FINERY VERY WELL decorations of Christmas are far below those former years, according to the Empire reporter who has been making the rounds for the past 25 years, and did again last night. But what is lacking in the open air is made up by decorations in- doors, ranging from large decorated Christmas = trees to smaller ones either in front of windows or seen occupying a corner or side of the large rooms in the homes. Var- jous decorations appear in win- dows, and the few houses without some decorations are conspicuous among the holiday home-scene. ' €I at the window of the In the Waynor tract, R. E. Gar- | Pan Airways office rison has colored lights SUTUNB| py.; tne Triangle Barber Shop across his residence on the High-|, “4coieq with paper bells, and e ; little trees are painted on the mir- Twelfth Street, usually brilliant-1 .. ly lighted, has but one ml):lnu!'; Spruce display, two lighted Christmas trees | ground for the wares at the Thom- on the porch and a string of lights | a R i blue i 65 feiath Hardware, and b g ‘“‘l entrance at the Farle|gjeqn from the tree in Darnells unter home i A revolving tree and a snow scene The Governor’s house has string- complete with lake and lighted ers down the columns and fi(ml“ chateau fills the window at the the lower part of the porch on the | y,e5y.young Hardware store east side. On Ditson Avenue, two € Yulstide songs waft out into the small Christmas trees, and a string | o, Christmas brilliance is shining all over Junea Trees shine throught cozy living room windows, = and shop displays are embellished with tinsel and green boughs and many colored lights. The giant tree on the corner of First and Seward glows red and blue and green through the rain The windows at the Baranof ! coifee shop are framed with spruce, {and b spill forth autumn leaves and pine cones. The lob- | bies of the Baranof, Gastineau and | Juneau hotels are dominated by brilliant towering trees, and anoth- Outdoor this year ots shines American kranches form a back- lights are at the home of MIS. | guer the door George B. Rice Up on Dixon Street the Ralphi Enough rare perfumes sparkle in Mize family has a natural tree on'the windows oi the Harry Race their lawn brilliantly aglow with drugstore to delight the hearts lights. Up on Gold Belt Avenue,iof every girl in town, and Per there is a tree in the E. E..Eng-| has a gay display of seasonal strom yard and on Seventh Avenue, | gifts. Bright metal balls are sus- Rude has a lighted tree.! pended over a colorful array of Hill, there is a lighted ' packaged fruit cakes at Sully’s tree on the porch of the Nor-'Bakery, and around the corner in man Cook residence and Hugh J. ' J. B. Burford's is a wide t- Wade has a string of lights on the ' ment of Christmas candles in the Basin Road. {shapes of snowmen, Santa Claus, Two trees are on the second trees and stars. Of interest to the story porch of Dr. W. W. White- younger set is the window filled head and the T. Jacobsen rvesi- | with dolls, toy furniture and all dence has two lighted porch trees the wonderful things that make with streamers of lights overheadd. any Christmas a merry one There is a large lighted tree to The Alaska Federal Savings and the rear of the Bethel Tabernaclej Loan Association has arranged a on Franklin Street and there is a snow scene with pretty littie houses tree at the MacKinnon apnrl-:n tling under a midnight blue ments. | Lights are strung along various | marquees on down-town streets. i One decorated tree of former years is missing this season, and! that is the one that has attracted church. Three miniature Christmas so much attenticn on the marquvc“ trees stand in ethereal cloaks the entrance of the Baranof | spun glass, while in the next w on Pranklin Street dow is the much admired sna -o- - | scene by Harold Salisbury, flank- ed by a big pink angel and a Governmenl Bonds |s!ack of shiny red drums. i H I Take Slight Drop' Two models in shimmering white growns grace the show windows of Behrend's department, standing on either side of a { golden spots on NEW YORK, Dec, 24.—P—Prices | T of U. S. government bonds dropped | abruptly today as the Federal Re- serve System apparently lowered the | the three wise men gazing toward levels at which it has recently sup- ( the bright star which gleams in ported the market. {the blue heavens. The other scene The Victory Loan 2!4s of Decem- | depicts a tiny village, with a light- ber 1967-1972, a pivotal issue, crack- | ed church and house shining in ed % of a point to 1003 bid on the | the sncw, and Santa’s sled and a over-the-counter market. little group of dngels indicate that A decline of that is comparatively | it's the night before Christmas. large for a Federal issue. Naturally the Juneau Florists The Federal Reserve Bank of New | have a bright array of holiday York declined to reveal at what! berries and red poinsettias, and levels support would be forthcom-;their windows are filled with ing. market action would show the bank’s | and hue and size. Sprays of pine, Dr. J. O On Star Dozens of little figurines rest on a snow grass mound at the Alaska Music Supply, and lights wink through the panes of a little over Hotel his sides. plays, a scene of the nativity with INCREASE; CATCH OF FISH UNCHANGED WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. — B — The United States is producing about four times as many fishing boats as before the war but fish production is much the same, the Fish and Wildlife Service said today. E. M. Power, Commercial Fisheries Statistician, said 1,156 vessels of five net tons or more received their first papers as fishing craft during the first 10 months of 1947. He predicted | the total by the end of the year| will be 1,300. | “This is nearly four times the pre- war rate of 300 or 350 new fishing | pilgrims, thinned to a handful by|the ing strife in the Holy Land,!much of mankind began today the ‘bnu ay Power told a reporter. | ! “Yet the total fish catch is about | {at the pre-war average of 4,400,000,- 1000 pounds a v i | Power said that during the war| |the government Is Sweptby . INWORLD Rain, Wind Christmas Eve Pilgrims, Trimmed to Handful, Gathering Today By CARTER 1 BETHLEHEM, Dec rain-sodden winds swept dean hills today as Christmas Eve DAVIDSON 24 —(P—Cold, unces arrived Prince in this birthplace of the of Peace for traditional ob- i servances. Many of them came from Jeru- requisitioned 700 | salem, down the road over which | Hunger and | | the Ju- i IT IS NOT ALL PEACE There Is Bloody Strife, Mis- ery in Foreign Lands ~Pilgrims Gather (By The Associated Press) In a world tormented by bloody strife, afflicted by the misery of cold and hunger and distressed by unsolved problems of peace, celcbration of the third Christmas since the end of the war There was bloodshed in Pulrsuno.‘ Greece, China and Indoghina. cold were = specters | i fishing vessels and imposed restric- | Joseph and Mary passed nearly 20 clouding the celebrations in much tions which limited the operation of the remaining boats. the nati which sa meat consumption in- ' crease from 125 to 150 pounds per capita per year H Poor postwar runs of salmon and |pilchard on the Pacific Caast have added. The annual pilchard catch of 250,000,000 pounds a year comi- i pares with pre-war production of a !billicn pounds. Power said statisties on old boats withdrawn from service are not available, and so the total size of fishing fleet is not known. October production of new fishing vessels of five tons or more totaled 1131, compared with 98 in October, 1946. California led with 25 new vessels in October, followed by Louisiana with 18 and Florida with 14. Power estimated that the total of new fishing vessels for 1945, 1946 land 1947 will be bout 3,100, compared with 5,526 in operation in 1940. ! Vessels granted their first papers \as fishing craft during the first 10 !months of 1947, by States included Pacific—Washington 206, Oregon 42, California 138 t Alaska 36, Hawaii 19, unassigned 10 60-DAY HOLIDAY FOR DISTILLERS ~ ENDS, MIDNIGH | WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. — B — jends at midnight tonight, leaving | distillers free to use as much scarce: ’mem finds a way to intervene. | The situation is not expected to prevail verv long. however, since | |intimates of President Truman say |he is prepared to sign the Republi- {can anti-inflation bill which re- istores his wartime power to ratiun | ;grain for making liquor | | (President Press Secretary Charles |G. Ross told a news conference {today that the bill may “be signed 'any day after Christmas.” He added centuries ago today to seek and be' relused shelter at an inn lights |unable to benefit from the rise in Nativity, on the site of the stable Vs food-consumption rate | where Joseph and Mary found a'Austria and Japan without peace haven and where Christ was born. Usually tens of thousands throng this hiilside village, sacred to a third of mankind, for the Christmas Eve ceremonies, but to- from a public address system |further retarded the industry, he 'day iar fewer braved the hazards an oasis of peace in a Holy Land of ccmmunal strife to pray at the place where the manger was. | In the Grotto, there will be con- stant prayers until the early hours cf Christmas morning before the little marble a which repre- sents the straw-filled manger where the baby Jesus lay. Services will also be held in other shrines in the Church of the Nativity and in the Franciscan Church of St Catherine’s next door. - - 11 PASSENGERS ARE FLOWN HERE BY PAA; 35 ARE FLOWN OUT All Pan American Airways flights operated on schedule yes- terday with ten passengers arriv- ing from Seattle, one from An- nette, and 29 persons flying to Seattle, one to Ketchikan, and six to Fairbanks. Arrivals from Seattle were: Mrs. Daisy Hutson, Pat Andrews, Har- lew Hulbert, Dr. E. Albrecht, Min- nie Dooley. Ellis Reynolds, G. Samuelson, Ce- cil Wonderd, Herbert M. Mead, Kenny Thibodeau. Annette to Juneau: Congdon. Juneau to Seattle: Richard Alfreda Dore white deer with The 60-day whiskey-making holiday | and infant, Bill Fleek, Labe Hart- field, Bruce Parker, Benjamin But- ler, Will Hall, Henry Valle, Agnes The Hayes Shop has two dis- grain as they wish until the govern- | Regan Dr. G. R. Doelker, Ted Hock- man, Olai Granell, George Kip- pola, Angus Gair, Catherine Gair. George Osage, Eldon B. Davis, Alfred Guin, Bob Moon, Bill Ray, Jane Brant. Jack Brady, Doris Brady, Mari- anne Carter, Gordon Hodge, Jens Olsen, J. D. Smith, Larry C. Rice, William Meals. Juneau to Ketchikan: Anneil Tucher. Juneau to Fairbanks; Agnes A spokesman indicated that icandles in every conceivable shape |that “there will be a statement with | Johnson, Robert Johnson, Carl C. Their | beccme a Hence, he said, the industry was | goal was the Sacred Grotto of the tightening. it.”) | Jensen, Martha Good, Ray Stevens, policy. - ee——— { jand shiny copper lamp-vase com-| If so, the distillers may be limited | binations with red shades add toim 2,500,000 bushels of grain a month HERE FROM ANCHORAGE the variety and color. Ally and Susie Neave of An-| Back down to the Nugget Shop, chorage, are staying at the Baranof | and hére the windows are brilliant Hotel. * with gems and polished silver, and < yin the background are huge red |and silver metallic holly leaves. Around the corner an assortment of festively - decorated pastries The Washingto tempts the passer-by from under Merry-Go-Round ia pretty little tre: lfmd frosty icicles, dripping from the window ]of the Purity Bakery. by LREW PEARSON | Parson's Eiectric has a beauti- ful big tree, and both the Mar- PARIS—(By Wireless)— George Gershwin once wrote a song, “An American In Paris” which rever-g . 3 fine gifts. berated up and down the boule-! vards. That was the day when! Ahd PasE e Do gL W large Balis: wail. cateties ann éay e white building upon the window of iy tes sinnifig Dhiborinet and‘which is inscribed in large golden 4 : A : PP xg O hose | 1€Ut€rS, “Job Printing.” . This is the :a ) ;ng év:r bicc ’Ig:dgy.l’ans is[h““e of the Daily Alaska Empire, Y aNE s T Y oteh theand the staff behind that no doubt 09 81 FAWA, A Foug dusty pane wishes you all a very streets at 10 p. m. and you think MERRY CHRISTMAS! there must be a curfew. No one, B ¢ is stirring. People are home in| bed—the only place where they can: keep warm In the daytime | tired, discouraged people trudge through the streets, the color of\ their faces matching the gray of | the buildings. Paris is still proud, still loath to| accept outside help, but discourag- etl—very discouraged. { { Beautiful have displays or rare and STEAMER MOVEMENTS Alaska from Seattle, due Satur- day. Is Christmas ship. Square Knot, from Seattle, due tomorrow. Sword Knot scheduled to sail from Seattle Dec. 26. MUCH TO WORRY ABOUT | Aleutian scheduled to sail from The “New Look” the gals have | Seattle, Saturday. ! been worrying about back home Princess Nerah ccheduled to sail doesn't worry the women hcre.,“""“ Vancouver, Decemper 29. They have too much else to worry | Jumper Hitch scheduled to sail about . . . Not one French woman | from Seattle January 3. ¢ | Denali, from westward, ! southbound Sunday. tConflnuedAon i’a;e Foun’ tin' Victor Fur Shop and the Home | | —a figure which Secretary of Agri- culture Anderson has been trying | |to persuade them to accept volun- | ; tarily. | The 65 per'cent of .the industry |represented by the Distilled Spirits | ! Institute, while unwilling to go all | |the way with Anderson, is pledged} to use only 45 per cent as much | grain as it consumed a year ago. | | The institute has asked the rest | |of the industry to follow suit. If the | {formula were adopted, about 3,500,- | 1000 bushels a month would be used. | ‘The expiring 60-day holiday was | agreed upon by the industry in re-! sponse to an appeal by the Citizens | |Food Committee during its cam- | | paign to save grain for Europe. | |JOHN DAPCEVICHS HOME " FROM VISIT IN SEATTLE| Home in time for the holidays, !Mr. and Mrs. John Dapcevich ar- | (rived yesterday on the Denali rrom’ |Seattle where he has been attend- | |ing a training course in connection | with his position with the Veterans Administration. | 'askan relatives in Tonasket, a little | i mountain town about 300 miles from | Seattle. They also saw Mrs. George | | McEvoy, sister of Mrs. Glen Allen of Juneau. : | When asked if he were glad to be |back, Dapcevich said very emphati- cally, “Yes! I hate Seattle, very So we do, s Jessie Stevens. - Drinks Whiskey for Lunch; Gefs Layoff; There's No Relief HARRISBURG, Pa., Dec. 24—® —Drinking whiskey during lunch to ease the pain of a toothache is suf- ficient grounds for firing an em- ployee, says the Pennsylvania State Unemployment Compensation Board of Review. The board rejected the claim of an unidentified Johnstown (Pa.) man who sought jobless benefits following his discharge as a watch- man at the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation's Lorain works. “Even though the claimant had a reason for obtaining whiskey during | his lunch hour,” the board held, “his action in so doing was nevertheless deliberate and intentional in view of the employer’s positive rules and constituted a breach of duty x x x .” | S S S | SUES FOR DIVORCE | Edward David James filed suit grounds of incompatibility. They | were married at Juneau on Feb. 3, 1943 and have no children. There are no property rights involved in the suit which was placed by M. E. Monagle, i e FROM NEW JERSEY 1 Jersey, is stopping at the Baranof.' where “asterity” h; new word for Wrangling among powers left Germany, | of Europe, victorious treaties and Communist pressure in the “cold war” kept the govern- ments of Western Europe vigilant The little town of Bethlehem, the cradle of the Lord Jesus, was ripped by communal hatred and ! blocdshed. More than 300 persons | have been slain in Palestine since ! Nov. 29, when the decision was tak- en to split the land into Arab and Jewish States Pilgrims flocked to the tiny hill- side town, where Christ was born | m a stable, for traditional relig- | ious okservances on the anniver- sary of his birth. In . London, King George VI| singled out British coal miners for cight of 18 Christmas awards 1ol heroism, recalling instances of bravery in mine disasters of 1947 In Spandau Prison, Berlin, hlenk‘ Christmas Eve services were plan- ned for Rudolf Hess, Karl Doe- nitz, Erich Raeder, Constantin von Neurath, Albert Speer, Baldur von Schirach and Waltedd Funk—one time Nazi bigwigs sentenced for war crimes at Nuernberg. T elers leaving Sydney for San Francisco tonight and U. S. sailors aboard a tanker out of Honolulu will have two Christmas Days and} will observe both. The Australian| Airways plane on which the Syd- ney passengers travel will cross the international dateline, and the air- line has arranged to serve two Christmas dinners. That's the way it was on the tanker Ashtabula, too. Gen.MacKfifiur Takes ' | Hand in Hurrying Up Housing for Japanese TOKYO, Dec. 24. (P—General MacArthur today ordered the Japa- nese government to see that suffi- cient labor is provided for work on a local housing project for depend- ents of occupational personnel. He said in a directive that the labor shortage was the result o “insufficd:nt distribution of food and clothing rations, lack of trans- portation, and financial difficulties of contractoys due to delay in pay- ments by the Japanese government.” R Anchorage Man Is Robbe_d_in Seattle SEATTLE, Dec. 24— (P—Stokes Royal, a widower, and his son Jim 13, expected to be on their way tc Father Flanagan's Boys' Town in the Middle West yesterday. Instead they were at a hotel, fac- ing a bleak Christmas. The two came here last week from Anchorage, Alaska, on their way East to Boys' Town, where Royal said he had accepted a job as a re- creation worker. But Monday morning, he found that his wallet with about $164, all his money, was missing. e RICE SHIP, BATTERED, TORN, AT HONOLULU HONOLULU, Dec. 24. — (#—The freighter Simon Benson, battered and torn by heavy North Pacific The Dapcevichs, who left Juneau in U. S. District Court yesterday seas, steamed into the safety of in October, visited with several Al- !fm- a divorce from Hilda James on Honolulu Harbor last night. The Benson, enroute to the Orient, sent out an SOS Dec. 15, saying that | Juneau at Christmas TRUMAN IS By Carol Beery Davis When Christmas time rolls 'round each year There's one quaint place I'd be! All wrapp'd about with mountains, sheer, My twinkling town, I see. For home is Juneau, Christmas-time. A gladsome surge I feel Tow'rd kindly streets that, carefree, climb, Nor pilgrimage reveal. I love the bridge’s slender grace \ frames the sunset’s glow; The harbor lights; the cold moon's trace That Upon the Channel’s But Christmas Eve unpacks my dreams! Just let the Taku blow! With carolers of old-time themes I crunch across crisp snow. And shining trees, within, without, Call “Welcome home Spruce slopes, with hoar-frc “Who can't afford a tree? Glad bells are ringing everywhere— the morn— charge the air. i The midnight bells With saered joy the In Juneau, “Christ is born! The purest gold [ find In hgnrts of friends who laugh and cry With me and are my kind. With jell of rare lagoon they come, Or loaves of warm, new bread. Emotions swell, but lips are dump. My hand-clasp speaks intstead. Be still, my soul, and wing a pray'r Of humble thanks, above, home, white mountains, fair; This treasur’'d place I love. For friends, m MESSAGE BY POPE PIUS Xil VATICAN CITY, Dec. 24.—P Pope Pius XII, in his annual Christ- n: ‘policy of insincerity” among na- ions was blocking the path to peace wnd called for a “league of honest nen” to safeguard the world against war. The Pontiff specifically blamed “a growing tendency toward insincer- o need for costly gifts have 1. s message, declared today that a |demands for the elimination of war- { | mongers and adherence to the Pots- | ents arrived in the Matthew Wilson (dam declaration. ty” for collapse of the recent For- ign Ministers Conference in Lon- | ton, which he said had lett the (|TY pou([ D vorld “further than ever from the | rue peace.” i He sharply condemned those na- | jons which, he said, had adopted ! the lie and the garbled word” as| accepted weapons of offensive” in | n effort “to win at any cost (hel OBSERVING CHRISTMAS Greetings Exchangd Today to White House Staff- To Greet Nation By ERNEST B. VACCARO WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. — (® — President Truman, celebrating Christmas in the White House for the first time, had a merry greeting | today for all who came his way. | He invited all White House em- ployees—{rom maids to aides—into his oval office for a personal hand- shake and an exchange of the tradi- tional “Merry Christmas.” Later, at 5:16 pm. (EST) he ar- ranged to greet the entire nation by radio after clicking on the lights |decorating a huge Christmas tree (on the south lawn of the Executive { Mansion yrounds Upwards of 15,000 persons were ex- pected to witness the ceremony at first hand, and television cameras | were to broadeast the scene for the j first time. { The President’s sister, Miss Mary |Jane Truman of Grandview, Mo., l and Mrs. Truman’s family are spend- | flow. to me. st tinsel, shout ing the holidays in the White House. After breakfast Christmas Day, L""‘ Trumans and the Wallaces will | gather around the family tree on jthe second floor to open their pres- fents. Later a turkey dinner, with all the customary trimmings, will 'bv served. Mrs. Truman's mother, Mrs. David | Wallace; her brothers, George and | Frank, and their families from In- | dependence, Mo.. and brother Fred, !'of Denver, all will participate in the bservance. Mrs. Truman, Margaret, and the Wallaces plan to attend midnight i church services tonight at a nearby 1 Episcopalian Church, Mr. Truman, {a Baptist, likely will remain in the White House since his church is not Adop' print'ples inlanning a similar service. TOKYO, Dec. 24, — tHlpnn's! ' iy comention ute " roessny. | TWINS BORN TODAY TO adopting 27 “action principles” cm-' M‘""Ew mlms bodying an obligue call for abolition Not one, but two Christmas pres- of the emveror system and outright | Mr. and Mrs. i!amily this morning. After the surrender, the Reds;Matthew Wilson are the proud |loudly demanded an end to the | parents of twin daughters, who were emperor system, but enountered {born this morning in the Govern- stiff public resistance. “Warmong- ; ment Hospital. The first daughter, ers” were not named twho was born at 8:15 weighed six - — ‘pounds. two ounces, and the second daughter, who was born at 9:12 weighed five pounds, 15 ounces. Mother and children are doing SLEUTHING JOB nleely. The proud father is a fisherman To RAISE A"IE and recently moved from Hoonah. The twins join two brothers and a sister. PP G Bucky Harris, who has been heldl nattle of class interest and theories, Y City Police since last Saturdayyyigg MacKINNON JR. RETURNS f ideologies and power politic: The Pontiff named no names in | on a disorderly conduct charge, was! to the Due to arrive from Fairbanks on turned over U. 8. Marshflli Jlacing the blame for the present this morning to face a charge of tne pan American plane today is tate of world affairs, but his 4.400- | sord address contained many pas- | grand larceny. Mrs. Stmpson MacKinnon Jr. She Investigation the police hag been attending her last semester by ages which western listeners, at'brought out that Harris had al- ¢ the University of Alaska. east, interpreted as, condemnation | legedly stolen an overcoat and two f Communism and of the postwar fountain pens from Maurice Ny-} | strom. - | U. 8. Commissioner |and bond was set at $1500. olicies of the Soviet Union. >-es MOOSE OPEN HOUSE The Moose Lodge will hold open Gray { house in their club rooms in the :Seward Building on Christmas Harris waived preliminary hear- Night from 7:30 on. Turkey with He was arraigned before Felix - JANTA CLAUS BEAT ' ‘ |ing and was lodged in the l"fl‘l"nll the trimmings and Tom and . !eral Jail pending action by the( jerries will be served. Members DEAD”NE, SAD (ASE #%nd “Jeey. and their families are invited to i AR } e attend fthe festivities. - HUNTINGTON, W, Va,, Dec. 24— !J. H. SAWYER FILES, sl S g | P—Santa Claus beat the deadline m his visit to 10-year-old Jackie Lockhart. One of Mr. and Mrs. Olen Lock- 1art’s six young sons, Jackie, under- vent an operation for a brain umor three weeks ago and for a hort time appeared to be coming rack strongly. But then he began to weaken and he doctor gravely shook his head, o Christmas was moved up a few lays. There were plenty of toys and a ree with all the trimmings. Jackie vasn't strong enough to play with ‘he toys — especially a favorite—a shiny pistol. He asked that it be placed beside ais head on the pillow, where he saressed it and spoke of the happy | lays ahead when he would romp yesterday | were Ben Schoen and Daniel Ander- and “shoot it.” Yesterday Jackie died. R - | DAVIS REMAINS GO OUT The remains of Oliver E. Davis, of the ANS, who passed away on s | i J. H. Sawyer. of Sawyer's Landing, DEMOCRATIC HOUSE ; To sperd the holidays in Fair- 'bank.s. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stevens flew north via Pan American Air- ways yesterday. They will visit with their daughter and son-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoopes. D Lt i FROM KANSAS CITY HOME FOR HOLIDAYS Mrs. Martha Good of Kansas Kenny Thibodeau, son of Mr, and | City is stopping at the Baranof Mrs, Joe Thibodeau, arrived yester- | Hote! day from Seattle via Pan Amerlcunl today filed with the Clerk of the Court in Juneau as a candidate for the Territorial House of Represen- tatives on the Democratic ticket Sawyer votes in the Windham Bay precinct. | - >-oe - HERE FROM PORTLAND Mrs. Violet Krema of Portland is registered at the Baranof Hotel. Airways to spend the Christmas holidays with his family. Kenny is in his sophomore year at the Uni- | versity of Portland. . | ka0 NN, ! FROM HAINES HOSPITAL NOTES R. E. Gadbois of Haines is stop- Admitted to St. Ann's Hospital | Ping at the Bananof Hotel. g HERE FROM KETCHIKAN John W. Thornton of Ketchi- kan is staying at the Baranof. for medical treatment son. Leaving the hospital were Della ! Ripoli, Mrs. Edith Hansen and baby ! LT boy, and Mrs. D. Horton. CALIFORNIA VISITOR > | U. B. Gilroy of Sacramento, FINED $25 Calif.. is registered at the Baranof. - Inez Vosotros was fined $25 on a! heavy seas had split its plates and | Monday evening, will be taken to drunk charge this morning by City | HERE FROM PETERSBURG that water was pouring in on its| cargo of rice. The rice swelled and threatened to rip the ship’s sides. l “We dumped part of the rice,” said | one crewman, “and then the weather | due definitely, and you can quote me.” Gordon Mudge of Trenton, New calmed and we were able to make | it without too much troublz’ Chicago for final interment widow, Mrs. Rosina Davis, will ac- His Magistrate William A. Holzheimer. Quentin St. Antoine of Peters- > burg is staying at the Banaof Ho- ‘company the body. i INTENTION TO WED tel . 5 | Edward R. Cox and Ruth Bailey, i B s MRS FROM YONKERS both of Juneau, today applied w}- AT THE GASTINEAU George T. Bernard of Yonkers, U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray for Ear]l Benity of Petersburg is N. Y, is stopping atthe staying at the Gastineau Hotel. Baranof. a marraige license. |