The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 6, 1948, Page 1

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’_-‘— e — SATURDAY 1 P.M. Edition HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” PRBRREER T VIS SATURDAY 1 P.M. Editica VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,829 JUNEAU; ALASKA, SATURD! Y, MARCH 6, 1948 7 PRICE TEN CENTS CHENNAULT KRUGDENIES |3 Councilmen CONTROL OF X-RAY DRIVE WANTSAID CHARGES OF Af Anchorage RUHR IS NOW REGISTERING - FOR CHINA SEN. BUTLER' Will Resign AGREED UPON STA ANCHORAGE, Alaska, March 6.— LONDON, March 6. M — The RTSMON. ! | H. BRIDGES OUSTED AS DIRECTOR (10 Takes Action in Cali- , fornia - May Start De- District Chairmen Named| A - | wa[hme Leader Of Hymg Says Interior Depanmen”“" Three Anchorage city officials,| United States, Britain and France for City and Adjacent A | whose election last year has been the have agreed upon international con- Ilgefs 'S NOW on Way subject of protracted litigation, an-' trol of the Ruhr and close coopera- ( from Orient fo Wash. TOKYO, March 6- (M—Claire L. Chennault, wartime leader of the Flying Tigers, said tonight he agreed with Generals MacArthur and Al-| bert C. Wedemeyer that the United| States should lend military aid to China. Chennault stopped here briefly on his flight to Washington, where he will testify before the House For- eign Affairs Committee on Ameri- can aid to embattled China. He ar- rived by plane from Shanghai. The jutjawed airman snorted when told that Senator Glen Tay Jor had suggested that President Truman demand the resignations of MacArthur and Wedemeyer for urg- ing a “foreign policy at variance with that of the Administration.” said Chennault v Taylor of Wyoming—oh, 10, is it?—probably wanted to get his name in the paper.” Chennault, who operates a com- mercial airline in China, was accom- panied by his Chinese tride of a few weeks. BLANKET PRIMARY TEST CASE COMING UP NEXT MONDAY | The test cf the recent blanket! primary law will come before U. S. Judge George W. Folta Monday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. This is a test case as to whether a voter can cast a ballot in the next primary eiection without first designating his party affiliation. The law itself, as to voting for either party after the ballot is obtained, is not under attack. The action is brought on a manda- mus against the Clerk of the U. S. Couri by Albert White, and he will represent his case himself and At- torney General Ralph Rivers will represent the Clerk of the U. S Court e — YAKUTAT INCOnx ORATES A petition was received in US. District Court here today for the incorporation of the City of]| Yakutat as a second class munici- pal corporation. The petition was' presented by Attorneys Henry Ro- den and William Paul, Jr., and car- Not Blocking Timber Development WASHINGTON, March 6.—® Secretary of the Interior Krug and some memters of the Senate Inter- jor Committee agreed late yester-' day on a common purpose—the quick development of Alaska. Krug sz2id that has been his ob- jective since he became head of the Interior Department Senator Butler (R-Neb), who has, Leen eritical of Krug's Alaskan pol-| , promptly agreed that rapid| growth of the Territory is also the committee's aim. Senators Watkins (R-Utah) and Malone (R-Nev) shared Butler’s op- infon Krug testified against bills to can- cel Alaskan Indian reservations es- tablished by former Secretary Ickes forbid establishment of others and to transfer Alaskan duties of the h‘dm"'B‘g:‘i_:“‘l": ‘::;“;Tt‘fl"ifmm MANY N0M|NAIED He also denied charges in a letter| BY VFw FOR NEw POST OFFICIALS from Butler that his Department or| its employees are blocking the de- velopment of Alaskan timber re- were received fm‘i Post offices at last} sources. Krug told a subcommittee he had pight’s regular. meeting of Taku Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars.| unced today they will resign te- tion to enlist western Germany’s re the General Municipal Election ets in the Marshall Plan. April 6 | In confersnces here the Western They are Councilmen Edward G. Powers also agreed that western Barber and L. McGee, and Anton Germany should have a féderal And . a member of the Utilities form of government, providing ade- Board. Tuoeir terms would have ex-| quate authority but protecting the tended another year i rights of the various ste Soon after they had taken office. A communique wasds District Attorn Ray Plummer after the conferences ended started court action to declare their| No hard agreement was reached election illegal on grounds that 653 upon merger of the French Zone voters were not properly registered| with the United States-British fcr the 1947 election | Zones of Occupation, but responsible The trio said in a letter to Mayor| officlals said decisions reached here "rancis Bowden and the City Coun-| will lead to that objective. cil they would 1esign their positions The three powers. decided Ger- tall any difficulties the Coun-| many will be represented in the ight encounter in transacting) international control of the Ruhr. C business while its memership, No indication was given whether was in dispute, Russia will be invited to participate. All other Council seats will be atj The Ruhr agreement was in gen- staka in the coming election !eral terms. The specific S ? mendations were not disclosed. They . will be submitted first to the .gov- | ernments oncerned } The three powers adjourned until [ for « ! next month their talks on the role Germany will play in the economic recovery Program - - BULLETINS Nominations eight - elective JERUSALEM Jews in Haifa kill- | Residenfial Area One of the most extensive drives ever organized in Juneau will get under way Monday morning, March when volunteer workers start a > to house canvass to register estimated 6,000 residents in the ¢ cau area for thé free commun- !ity mass X-ray survey, which begins | March 22, in the Methodist Church i pariors The city and adjacept residential avea were zoned and district chai \men were appointed for each di: trict, at the organizational meeting the canvassing committee held \fternoon, under the auspices 5t the Juneau Woman's Club. Ins- ructions as to the purpose of the § ;urvey and the operation of the X- recom- ! »y Miss Lois M. Jund, administrative tor and tuberculosis education wsultant of the Territorial * De- partment of Health, which is con- ducting the survey, in cooperation with the U. 8. Public Health Service, and sponsored locally by the Gas- tineau Channel Health Council and he Juneau Public Health Center Miss Jund said she has met with gratifying cooperation throughout Ithe city and expects the volunteer canvassers to find little difficulty in egistering every man, woman and child in the Juneau area lor the | ‘CARNIVAL QU Banfl, Canada, winter carni PALESTINE E E N~ Joyce Morrison, J ) | | | 1 | | i TN | queen of the | al, dons skis for practice run, i Nation Wheat portation Move Again SAN FRANCIZCO, March 6.—(P— The CIO custed Harry Bridges as Northern California Regional Di- rector yesterday. And, newspapers reported, a third pt is to be made to deport the Australian - born longshere labor leader. In Washington, however, aides of Attorney General Tom Clark sald ‘the Bridges case has not been re- opened.” Tae CIO fired Bridges as North- ern California Regional Director yesterday because he went contrary to National CIO Pglicy by supporting Wallace’'s Third Party and oppos- ing the Marshall Plan of aid to Eu- rope. He was warned two weeks ago to get in line with poliey of the CIO Executive Committee on the issues or face ouster from the Appointive Director's position. He was eilent on his ouster. Bridees retains two elective posts. He is President of the CIO Inter- national Longshoremen's and Ware- housemen’s Union and a Vice Presi- dent of the National Execitive CIO Couneil. 2 ‘Tim Flynn, fcrmer member of the Board of the CIO Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding workers not found any persons in his De- Verne Metcalfe, present Senior Vice ed five persons and damaged three! . vev partment who had told Alaskan In- they claimed under aboriginal rights in the Tongass National Forest mander was nominated to tel e \ ing to do with a contract the In-!p = e d to Lely ndings severely by firing three- ppe canvass is expected to take cians made with the Development| .. el ir is! 3 Y hose T ires this t rusning o U018 harbor area today, police said. uewd, ‘Puane and Giacler Hignway firm millions of dollars worth of s ' 4 . ecives elections will be held g | Ymber fshand :e:;ngost nLnegu;g llk]fls onth,! | PARIS — French police arrestady rive or mote assistants. % persons today after seizing @i pistrict Chairmen who have keen PROBLEM UNSOLVED Agreement, $2 Per Bushel land member of the CIO Organizing 'staff, was named Bridges' successor jas Director for Northern California. i The climax of the CIO family fight /came as newspapers reperted a Jus- |tice Department investigator had | been sent here “to seek evidence on dians they had a right to sell timber He said his Department had noth-| Commander suceeding Hunb. .. mortar shells at Arabs in ‘thei zpout one week and will cover Ju- Corporation of New York to sell the |y, onyy purther nominations will be! | Each district chairman will appoint He said the Indian had no right e 4 Nominated to succeed Metcalfe as! .\ \oaq of weapons said to have to sell the timber and anyone try¥ing c.njor viee Commander was Robert{ cut it under the contract woul s ke sub, Fcrest Service. Claim Of Indians Both Krug and Mastin Depa 3 “R8, ".V““"' Junior Vice Commander, epartment Solicitor, said if the Shertock, present Post Adjutant; | Government took land the Indians p.pe N. Druxman. Edward P. Chester, Jr., ject to prosecution by the p .cont junior Vice Commander de- ‘clined to run for the higher office. Three men were nominated for William Riley, present Post Judge i been destined for Palestine. | WASHINGTON—James A. Farley told a radio audience last night , that Henry Wallace will poll som { five-million votes in November. Anc up to one-million of them, he added, 'will come from New York. “Mrs. George Playdon, pamed by Mrs. Edward Chester and General Co- {'Chatrmen, are: Mrs. Netl Frivtimas, I Mfs. Ernest Lincoln, Lieut, Nash lof the Salvation Army; Mrs. Don Foster, Mrs. L. Hunsicker, Mrs. Jam- es McNamara, Rev. Walter Soboleff, | Mrs. James Ryan, Mrs. E. V. Carlson, I Mrs. Will Godding, Mrs. Wilfred WASHINGTON, March 6.—(®— Main SOII.I"OH May Be l.e" | A 3¢-Nation wheat agreement put-| Up 'o Un"ed S'afeS Iting a $2 a bushel celling price on! wheat exported by the United Stat-| and Russia s, Canada and Australia was an- LAKE SUCCESS, March §.—# wunced today. | The International Wheat Council Solving the Palestine problem seem- ?mudu public the five-year pact. It ic ubject to approval by the U ss and to ratification by the, | which to base a third formal effort” to deport Bridges, a native of Aus- wralia, He-Bow is 4 U. 8. citizen. Bridges took note of the reports in a statement expressing no surprise “my contemplated arrest” and hottly attacking the Truman Ad- ministration for “political intimida- - tion.” claim the Government should give a4uocate and Willlam Ray R it s .| T BV Eobr Quat-! 1oryo-Allied Headguarters int y termaster, and Willlam Ray Werei .., today directed the confisca partment can settle the aboriginal i rtermaster. | rights question in Alaska. both nominated for Quart SYer f¢ion of all property belonging to|angell, M “We can sit down with these Tn- , " men’ ;\\jdnicne:;v:;a;:ong;%l:j’ former ultra-nationalists and to se- | gqward = Chiester, Mrs. Sherwin g said, “ . el 8 : ret and terroristic organizations : vis, Rev claims set a year or two. We 2 3 o | i . Sweeney, 5. (TS . minated for Chaplain. Shofner " | could give them either land or dol-| poyds that p;mmn st et | TOKYO — The Japanese Kyodo'a ghaughnessy, M. L. MacSpadden. lars for their claims. If dollars Con-| gt B - |News Agency says more than 700 - Milford Marshall was nominated . el 3 G b gress will have to approve. We are ¢ poct Surgeon and retiring pm,{muldlngs have been destroyed by a i:4 or 0st £ St . b only waiting for s OV f - 2 | series of unexplained fires in scat-| g for approval of Con- c,mmander Hunt Gruening was The w 1sl|M0de"‘ lady ! . Godiva Gels | . {Really in Bad Johnson, Mrs, Gus Gissberg, Mrs. Don Hutchins, Miss Mary Valen- ine, Mrs. D. W. Herron, Mrs. Roy George Playdon, Mrs. gress to put the plan into eftect.” | ¥ 3 . | tered parts of Japan. nominated for a vacancy as Trustes, 4 2 White said the Indians do not| " jarold B. Gronroos A It Mo, island of Shikoku, where 456 build- bave a right to make contracts for L’nu};l]lln and M. J. Whittier werel nd of Shikou, where 456 build- salé of timber in the Tongass Na- »|:;poxxltetl to a special committee! 5% wexe, destroyed, tional Forest where the Forest Ser- " i,yestigate reports voncerning ! ed today to have been left mainly to the United States and Russia. After two weeks of cautious de- bate, the United Nations Security Council late yesterday called on vhe five major powers to find a method consultations. China ha Land into Jewish and Arab na tions, reccmmended by the assembly Nov. 20 Britain announced off th that she would not take part in t consultationes. China has abstained from much cf the U. N. voting on Palestine. France has been reluctant to take a stand. ‘This prompted the general view floor abstained | he | [Junm' He said 10,persons had been ar- | sther Government concerned {rested recently and held without ‘The agreement fixes a minimum y.y for deportation orice as well as the $2 maximum.; eaeie] The minimum will be $1.50 a bush- {el in the first year, 1948-49. It wlll;w (HUR(HILL |S 1952 when the minimum will e GLOOMY; WORLD Between the top and bottom pric- ’ | actions will be “freely concluded and' {prices moved in accordance with | market conditions.” o | The 33 countries importing wheat! LONDON, March 6. — —Win- {are pledged to buy not less than'ston Churchill said today: from the three, “Any thinking man can see that irop 10 cents a bushel annually until , L.e agreement provides, trans-' (o"D"m BAD 500,000,000 bushels Canada would ' We are all moving into a terrible ried 26 signatures. It estimates vy, i g s § {he city's gross real property value| o Wi o UL "“p"dm‘”’ the U. S. Coast Guard’s supervision | 1 g e said Congress had decided in' ;e Marine Inspection Service. i at $300,000 and the city’s personal!the Tongass National Forest bill | y e . ert, tte, lia , Einar property value was estimated at|that only the Agriculture Depart-|; over Sulifs BT ! L H " $100,000. {ment can sell that timber and the Johnson and Verne. Metosife were ) Fu" °| M'“akes e appointed to a special committee lo[S'a'es “ew;paper | proceeds must be held in the Trea-, ;i and improve the Jeep Club. SACRAMENTO, Cal, March 6~ ypat the future of the Holy Land exporting countries | oTratfic officers found Helen' pedes™ " doorsteps of Wash- [ship 230,000000 bushels, the United:sitation at home and abroad. Not | Jackley driving along Broadway in jypton and Moscow States, 135000000, and Australia,!Only bankruptey and privation ap- nothing—but high gear! The first big-power meeting was | 85,000,000 |prasetscab B ks daiang i R As nude as Lady Godiva, the WO- et for Monday morning in the New | menace of a third World War rolls {man got first attention by going york offic of Soviet Delegate | toward us with every act of Russian imperialist aggression and Com- - o> - The Washington Merry - Go- Round By DREW PEARSON (Covyright, 1948, by The Bell Syndicate, | nc.) i ASHINGTON — Congre:ssman‘ Frank Keefe of Wisconsin won! fame a couple of years ago when he scowled from under shaggy eyebrows at Pearl Harbor witnesses' and fired searching questions re garding the real guiit of our great- est naval disaster. These who heard Congressman Keefe browbeat admirals never would have dreamed that he could be equally demanding when it came | to a humane subject like public health but ever since the tides of political 1ate put Keefe in charge of the subcommittee which votes funds for . hospitals, universities and medical research, he has be- gome a crusader for better health. Believe it or not, while othe: “OP Congressmen were pinchin; pemnies,. Keefe actually scolded U. S. Public Health officials for ask ing insufficient money to publicize a miraculous new means of pre- serving children’s teeth. | At a cost of 80 cents per child, | Congressman Keefe d)scovered,i children’s teeth can be treated with sodium fluoride, thereby pre-| venting dental decay in about 50 percent of the case: { Public Health officials before Keefe's committee told him that| scdium fluoride could be mixed in a solution and painted on chil- dren’s teeth four times in their | lives between the ages of three and| 13—after which most of them could | (Continued on Page Four) ' sury until the claims of the Indians st night's meeting was featured! § el 4 ' March 6 lisht | tioned in Juneau for the past six! from Seattle, are registered at the ! wnicn are decided. by @ Visit of: Alasks Department, TOEYO, - Japan, Rev. J. Earl Jackman, of the Board yput i G 3 v officers. Present were: Harold Japan's postwar Government, has of National Missions of the Presby- p yy.oo" Department Commander; |compiled schoolbooks full of mis terian Church, who has charge of o) " nMeLaughlin, Dcpart,mexxt:"'ak“- the newspaper Asahi said to- day. Alaakun. nvipslonk suggested the In- g . YVice Commander; and Allen; dian Bureau be abclished over a Per- 1" \p o oum Department Adjutant.i One book, Asahi noted, iod:ag Eie.or 10 Jeeie. This was their first visit fo TakuiPope Cregory XIII as Pope He said the Indian are not ready poo¢ iy o considerable period of, XIIl- for immediate transfer of the I""umn. . Another discussed Prof. Kiyoshi dian Bureau duties to the Territory. = ," oo py Gruening on last! Sbiga, who isolated the dysentery R e G week’s Leap Year Party stated that germ, and said he died 13 years azo. everyone attending had a good time, | Professor Shiga, however e said that attendance was good.jam still alive.” | -~ - Education Ministry officials say 9 |there is a shortage of texthook : i DEMOS pREpARE iwmers and proofreade: FIlIBUSIER o" Iman 2-c Seneca Bailey asked the (Ivll RIGHTS:permnnul officer at the Naval Air Station here for five days il o, 2 t leave. } | WASHINGTON, March 6.- {M—: “How come?” Lt. Dixie Democrats mounted guard in!asked ® | ihe Senate today ready to tilibusteri “My wife had triplets, sir ® .t a moment’s notice against any|sailor replied. ® civil Rights Bill i “Take 15 days,’ ® ' Eighteen Southern Senators agreed; gan. ® .t a secret session to keep one of ® | their number on hand at all times ® |the Senate is in session, He will keep, ¢ watch against any surprise move tojette, Idaho, has recently assum- ® call up or another of president Tru-led duties as traffic agent at the ® man’s race equality proposals which| Alaska Coastal Airlines in the Ju- ® have split party ranks, 1 neau office, ® | The group arranged, it was dis- ® closed, to have speakers ready to ® |gtarc talking whenever any of the anti-discrimination measures is tak- en up. named Gory © 00 00 00 00 00 23 e« He WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU (Pust 24 hours ending 7:20 am. today In Juneau— Maximum, 31; minimum, 28. At Airport— Maximum, 32; minimum, 26. WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Generally cloudy this after- noecn and Sunday with snow flurries this afternoon and tonight, occasionally mixed with rain Sunday. Slightly warmer with lowest temper- ature near freezing PRECIPITATION (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. taday In Juneau— .06 inches; since March 1, 1.3 inches: since July 1, 76.89 inches. At Airport— .17 inches: 127 inches; 45.56 inches. ® o 0 0 00 00 00 0 - .- ACS MAN TRANSFERRED . ASKED 5; G 15 % | ATLANTA, Muth 6—\P— Sea- . o 1 $ L. D. Morgan ? the exclaimed . Mor- ->o— NEW TRAFFIC AGENT - VISITOR FROM MANILA W. G. Benedict, Manila, P. L, is { registered at the Baranof Hotel - i ANCHORAGE VISITOR i Richard Stein of Anchorage registered at the Ga D Roy| HERE FROM ANCHORAGE Donelson is scheduled to leave! W. R. McDaniel of Anchorage here on the Baranof for Ketchikan, | registered at the Baranot Hotel. where he has been transferred - in the Alaska Communications IN FROM SEATTLE System of the U. S. Army Signal| R. E. Brennan, Wm. D. Bolin, E. Corps. Donelson has been sta-|A. Schaffer and Ray Johnson, all Technician Fourth Grade R ! composed less than 10 percent of the armed forces of the United States in every major war the country has partici- months. Baranof Hotel i pated hl‘ W ¢s of patrolmen Benjamin Morse {and Carroll B. Maynard, after she | obeyed their order to stop. Here's the story she told ! Municipal Court “I wanted to go out. My hus- pand didnt. 1 said I would any- way. So undressed me and ‘dared me like that—s0 '1 did” Said Judge McDonnell: “This court has heard everything i now.” Then he sentenced her to 80 days lin jail for drunken driving—unless she wanted to pay a $350 fine. She spent several hours in jail, ‘men paid the fine. D 'Vegelables No Substitute for :(ash Alimony SAN JOSE, Cal. March 6.—P— | Vegetable packer Sam Lobue told the divorce court it would be impos=- the he to go out {month alimony | However, he could let her take it jout in vegetables Her attorney argued that would put Lobue in the tating her diet—broccoli tod i tomorrcw, and the like | “My client needs money, not rut- jabagas,” sald the attorney. | Judge Leonard R. Avila agreed ay, beahs is;He ordered Lotue to pay $110 a property rights tineau Hotelymonth in cash pending the divorce| | action. Regular U. S. Army units have| any’yegetables Lobue contributed en name, Pauline | would be without judicial credit. | - HERE FROM NEW YORK | Charles Semal of New York is | registered at the Baranof Hotel position of dic- was put on the sessions. - - PNA BRINGS IN TEN PASSENGERS, TAKES 17 10 WESTWARD Pacific Northern Airlines made @ flight yesterday tringing the fol- lowing 10 passengers from An- chorage to Juneau: J. F. Mar- : shall, W. H. McDeniel, G. W. ,ard, Jessie Beach, Bill Stump, Mbert Shaw, Mr. Bowman, Al Mo- honey, Anna Johnston, L. E. Schaf- fer. Juneau to Cordova ner. Juneau to Anchorage Vicsor | Rowe, Daisy’Conright, L. A. Sturm, Dorothy Robertson, Elliott Robert- | son, L. Morrisy James Abbott, Emil Hansen, G { Johanson, Wm. Story, Dorothy Story, Dixie Lee Story, Francis Sutton, Jeseph Johnson, Harry through a red The Ught | Andrei A. Gromyko. A 10-day nmuicov OF GEOR IA s paled, however, by the blush- | 5 H. L. Faulk- N D ey Vern Harris, formerly of Pay-ig S pim to pay his wife $140 2, Wood, W. G. Benedict - . s ASKS DIVORC | Pauline Nelson has filed suit in | U. 8. District Court here for a di- vorce from Phillip Nelson on the grounds of cruelty. They were mar- ried in Juneay on August 30, 1947, and have no children or The suit, placed by Attorney M. E. Monagle, asks for return of the plaintiff’s maid- Vick - FAIRBANKS VISITORS | Doris Richardson and Matthew ! Johnson, both of Fairbanks, |staying at the Baranof Hotel J are' ham, ~ ACCUSES KLAN OF AIDING REDS | o e H | ATLANTA, March 6.®—Gov.! {M. E. Thompson in a strong stand | {against the Ku Klux Klan today call- jed for laws to end its “meetings of | intimidation.” ' The Georgia Governor accused the| Klan of delivering the South “intoi {the bands of cur enemies,” and ac-| !cused, the hooded secret order ot! aiding Communists and “race bait- ers.” | His denunciation of the Klan was! jcoupled with a restatement of his | opposition to proposed Federal anti-; {lyneh laws The Governor referred to recent electicn-eve demonstrations by the; |Klan in two East-Central Georgial |counties where Negroes were regis-| tered to vote, and declared: { “While our Senators and Con- gressmen tell the world that we {have enough laws and will rnlun-c; ithem, the Ku Klux Klan by such meetings cut the ground from be- neath their feet.” - - STEAMER MOVEMENTS Freighter Square Sinnet due |Juneau Monday I‘ Denali scheduled Seattle today Princess Norah scheduled sail frcm Vancouver March 9. Baranof. from west, scheduled ' south Monday ) ->o FROM WASHINGTON Maud Turner of Belling- Wash, is registered at the ! Baranof Hotel } i | i in to sail from to, Mg |F. M. on Monday night, munist viclence and intrigue.” The former Prime Minister jave these views in a letter to Frank Harris, Conservative candidate in s bye-election at North Croydon. >o e ""Mati Hari of Asia” Wanls fo Be Shof in Private PEIPING, March 6. Man- | chu-born Princess Yoshiko Kawa- shima, sentenced to die for es- pionage, said today she would be “greatly embarrassed” if executed in public. She asked to be shot in private, and without fantare. The Princess was called the “Mata Harl of Asia” at her trial last fall. PAST MASTERS' NIGHT BE OBSERVED Y BY MT. JUNEAU L The annual celeiration of Past Masters' Night will be observed by Mt. Juneau Lodge Wo. 147, A. and 8. at the Scottish Rite Temple. A din- ner will be served a¥ 6:30 nm., fol- lowed by the Stated Communication at 7:30 o'clock. The Past Masters of Mt. Juneau Lodge will exemplify the work in the third.degree, This annual event cddfll;"" es the date on which Mt, Juneau Lodge began to operate under di L All Master Masons on u Channel, and visiting brothers, are cordially invited and y urge to attend both the dinner and the | meeting, 2

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