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WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1948 "™ ™ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE JUNEAU, ALASKA { MARTHA O'DRISCOLL JESS BARKER . THOMAS GOMEZ JOHN LITEL @ ADDED e THIS IS AMERICA— “SWITZERLAND TODAY” FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS OF 47 “UNCLE TOM'S CABANA” LATEST NEWS FEATURE AT 8:15 - 10:15 Your Deposits ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS HE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition the bank is a mem- ber of Federal Deposit In- surance Corporation, which insures each of our deposit- ors against loss to & maxi- mum of $5,000. IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION You'll meet your friends when you travel the Alaska Line. Relax .. enjoy the magnificenr scenery and comfortable accommodations as you sail “outside” THE FINEST FOOD Elegantly prepared and expertly served ro ~om- pletely satisfy your fancy. SAILINGS ARE FREQUENT Sailings EVERY SUNDAY for KETCHIKAN and SEATTLE S. S. BARANOF DUE SOUTH JULY¥ 25 Sailings EVERY TUESDAY for CORDOYA. VALDEZ and SEWARD . 8. S. ALEUTIAN — JULY 27 ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Serving All Alaska There is no substitute for newspaper advertising! 'EINO MACK INSANE IS JURY'S VERDICT "DALTONS RIDE AGAIN" FEATURE killing of his father, Andrew! B G 9445 Mack, several days ago, was ad- The west's boldest desperadoes judged insane by the jury in the ride again in Universal's latest west-lsm‘m hearing held yesterday af- ern picture entitled “The Daltons|ionoon jn U, S. Commissioner R_lde Again” and which starts m-;GX'ny's Court. The jury's decision night at the Capitol Thegtx'e» was that Mack was insene and The reckless renegades give thrills it recommended that he be com- in their hot-headed daring €sCa-|piyeq to an institution for crim- pades. inally insane for the balance of In the big cast are Alan Curtis, k:: ?m‘ z s IB“’“ (GORUEYy Kmli _T;_;_S)'h?r' N(o;::! Eino Mack has been committed Xy, 35 SUN SREERL AR AEINE {to mental institutions six times: mez and John Litel. The feminin = e . four times from Juneau, once from Pafit is played by Martha O'DriS-| ) pora0e and once while in the e United States Army. — e { hearing were SALMON DERBY ENTRY o . & Carter. Dr. W. P. Bian- R Marshal Walter Hel- BLANKS, RULES READY |ici: siorinas witiam . Nabones, 1 and Nilo Mack, brother of Eino. The entry blanks and rules for the On the jury were Earle Hunter, forthcoming Salmon Derby are ready ' John Newmarker, John Walmer, and may be obtained at the follow- ' Monte Grisham, Gordon Gray and | ing places: | Joe Johnston. Madison Cycle and Fishing Sup- | The murder charge will now be ply, Juneau-Young Hardware, H & |dropped. i Q Sporting Goods Store, I. Gold~ |WASH. LAB. BUYER i Kirk Jones, Washington Labora- i Commerce Trout Derby weighs 4| pounds, 8 ounces and measures 24 and. one-quarter inches. Both tish were taken at Salmon Creek. | Ken Kearney still leads the cut-: throat anglers with a 3 pound 12/ outice catch measuring 24 andi three-sixteenths inches taken at Lake Hasseltorg. | John Quilico of the H & Q Sports | center today said that qualifying fish may be caught in either fresh or salt water as long as they are taken with rod and reel. Entries must be weighed in at the sports center. | RENTAL VESSELS NOW OPERATING | ATBOAT HARBOR For those who like to fish but| have no boat, a new small boat| rental service is now in operation | at the Juneau Small Boat Harbor, | Gordon Byrne, co-owner of the business said today. Byrne, formerly with the ACS in Juneau, and a partner, Ray Johnson, brought eight 16-foot boats up from the Puget Sound area last week to establish their business here. Complete with fish- ing gear, the boats may be rented by the hour or day and may be operated within a 25-mile radius of Juneau. The business will be stein and Thomas Hardware “OOME o“T » RETURNS 10 .IUNEMI| | s | i .ON THE LUXURIOUS CRUISE Hlllj.tury representative in Juneau, has CORSAIR it |remainder of the fishing season. | Jones visited the ' site of returned here and will remain injing i the Juneau area for about a week {rental boat at any time of day i before returning to Seattle for the |or night. the | HP Wisconsin open 24 hours daily, thereby mak- it possible to check out a The boats are powered hy 4.1 air-cooled motors, | devastating blast which complete-|are capable of doing six knots and |ly wrecked the Lyle Branchflower|are equipped with adjustable pitch jvitamin processing plant | attle the day after it occurred, and Former Private Ocean Liner of the late | J.Pierpont Morgan, world financial figure. On no other ship of its weight has so much money been lavished. Handles no i mail —handles no freight. Exclusively a | that one of the employees ¢ cruise ship of sumptuous lppoimmenlsv',d”‘d four days later was blown 60 ; i Carries a crew of 76 to cater to, and serve | feet through the air before strik-} 80 passengers, to which theship’s capacity | Ing a Wwooden has been restricted. crashed through Leaves JUNEAU for | A O !ceive. Exemplilying his statement door which he RILEY FURLONG TOPS VANCOUVER, sritish Columbia | f ™ OWN CATCH WITH DOLLY July 26; 5 ! Aug. 9-23 and Sept. 6_Mnnd:ly was nearly a pound hea- | vier and almost two inches longer lnnr"u'n long wanted to further establish his lead so he brought in a second GENERAL AGENTS | heavier than the first and a full inch longer. Furlong's present Dolly | NORTHLAND SAILINGS for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines, Skagway and Sitka Although his Dolly Varden entered than any competing fish, Riley Fur- | s | Dolly yesterday that was four ounces TRANSPORTATION €0, :, vo.2n. | which leads the Junior Chamber oll FROM SEATTLE THURSDAY, JULY 29 and AUGUST 5 S. S. ALASKA SAILOR'S SPLICE (Freight Only)—Sailing approximately July 22 for Ketchikan, Petersburg, Juneau, Skagway, Cordova, Valdez, Whittier and Seward. M. S. PALISANA (Referigerated Cargo)-—Southbound at Juneau about July 28, calling Prince Rupert and Seattle. HENRY GREEN——JUNEAU, ALASKA, AGENT o NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION (0. People Like Coke Where They Work ‘Coke’ Ask for it either way .. . both trade-marks mean the same thing. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE © 1948, The Coco-Cola Company | | 2 in Se-|screws to provide variable speeds. The craft are round bottomed, |said the actual force of the July|provided with high free boards and | 6th explosion was difficult to con-|have a draft of 16 inches. Office for the boat rental is di- {with a pointed incident, Jones said | rectly opposite the small boat har- who | bor. —_——— PAA (LIPPER BRINGS 23, CARRY 28 10 SEATTLE Bringing 23 passengers for Juneau, PAA Clippers yesterday took 28 others to Seattle. Arrivals were Henry Stryker, Pene- lope Barton, Jim Bernard, D. Svendson, Harold Whittaker, Eu- gene Falk, Amos Alter, Katherine Alter and infant, James Alter, Ray- mond Kruss, Harold and Dorothy Foster, Tommy George, Paul Serenx, Jim Morrison, Bernard Aybelette, Frank and Katherine Dekoch, Wal- ter Sharpe, Phyllis Hartman, Mar- jorie Henson and Richard Harvey. Leaving were Sheila MacSpadden, Edward Sparks, Walter Paulson, Fred Urban, Ralph and Margaret Johanson, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hig- gentotham, Nellie Knipple, Mel Blanchard, Noble, Marie and Eliza- Leth Palmer, Ray and Edna Dinkle, Mary Neese, W. B. Akers, T. J. and G. T. Solvig, Matt Holden, Chester McKellar, John Landroe, Earl Gre- gory, Halvor Ditlofson, Ed. Fuhrn-} son, Brony Pawlik, Olivé Duffy and E. Allen. To Annette—Everett Call, Daniel and Samuel Streeter, Ed Auer and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morrow. From Annette—Mrs. William Wagner. 108 ANGELES GIRLS LEAVE LAST NIGHT, Alice ‘Thornborrow, Kathryn Stern, Bonnie Schoeman and Mur- iel Verdugo left Juneau for the Interior of Alaska aboard the Baranof. The four girls, recent graduates of UCLA in Los Angeles, came here last September with plans of spending a year in Alaska before returning to the states. Having become very well known here since arrival, the girls plan to revisit Juneau on their south- bound trip. AR S FROM FISH BAY Wallace Westfall of Fish Bay is a new arrival at the Baranof Hotel. Radical Socialist Is Asked to Form New Flgnch Govt. PARIS, July 21—@®—Andre Ma- rie, a Radical Socialist, announced today he has been asked to form a new French government Marie, 51, was Minister of Justice in Premier Robert Schuman’s Cab- inet which resigned Monday in de- feat, oppesing a $40,000,000 cut.in the defense bill Marie is a moderate conserva- tive and his emergence marked a swing to the right He still is suffering effects of starvation in the German Buchenwald con- centration camp. . FLOWER SHOW WILL| BE HELD IN AUGUST; \GARDEN CLUB PLANS | The Flower Show of the Juneau | Garden Club will be held the mid- idle of next month, it was decided }nt the regular meeting yesterday (afternoon. Mrs. Harry Stonehouse | was named general chairman of the show. Mrs. Ernest Gruening | was hostess yesterday with Mrs. Earl McGinty assisting. | Mrs. William Byington demons- trated how to make corsages with |x seewt peas, Gladioli, pinks and Carnations. Mrs. McGinty was complimented with a hz\ndA‘ kerchief bon voyage shower prior to her departure for the states to make her hcme. Mrs, Earle Hunter was appoint- |pd chairman of the Living Mem- orial project which has as its purpose the raising of funds to plant a shrub or tree around the new Memorial Library in memory of each of the World War II dead o1 this district first, then other | sections of Alaska. Instead of sending funeral flow- ers, several individuals have al- !ready sent money contributions for this fund. The $250 prize money from the July 4 Garden Club float | will also be placed 'in this fund, which will be kept in a separate account at the bank. Mrs. E. J. Cowling passed out | samples of slug " Lait s with the | compliments of the Thomas Hard- |ware Co. For the flower show | next month all the club members | will help but the special commit- {tee assigned to this project will include beside chairman Mrs. | Stonehouse, Mrs. Marie Forward, Mrs. Rosemary Haen, Mrs. Ray Renshaw and Mrs. Gruening. | Guests at the meeting included |Mrs. Edith Evans of San Jose, | |Calii.; Mrs. James Larsen, Mis. |Dorothy Hurley, and Mrs. Lewis | Michaelson who belongs to a Gar- den Club of 500 members in San/ | Francisco. For the August meeting Mrs. L. E. Iverson and Mrs. Haen will be the hostesses. Mrs. Haen will also be on the telephone com- mittee to contact members. eee- - | SALVATION ARMY, GRATES INSTALLED, AUK VILLAGE BEACH Four new rustic tables and grates are available for Juneau picni at Auk Village beach, District Forest Ranger Larry Zach, Forest Service, announced today. These are located along the beach south of the Indian gardens and totem pole. The new facilities plus four already-existing covered shel- ters make it possible for eight groups to use the area. There is water at each of the covered shelters. A trail leads from the parking area near the “Entrance” sign at the south end to the beach. All tables ~an te easily reached by this trail which continues along the beac the Indian gardens. Two other short trails also lead to the beach from parking areas between the “En- trance” sign and totem pole. Other rustic tables and grates have been installed recently in this vicinity, said Zach. One table and grate is located near Nugget Creek on the uphill side of the trail about 100 yeards beyond the parking area. From here there is an ideal view of Mendenhall Glacier. Other tables and grates include two each at Dredge Lake and Lena Cove. to - CAPT. JOHANSON, NEW RUSTIC TABLES, &7 St ENDS TONIGHT SUSHN HAYWARD PAULLUKS wim JOSEPH AMS CALLEIA ASSIGNED JUNEAU OSA MASSEN - LOLA LANE JEROME COWAN Capt. Sexton Johanson, ol the Salvation Army, arrived in Juneau aboard the Princess Norah to assume | direction of Salvation Army activi- {ties in Juneau, Major Eric Newtould isaid today. Johanson will assume the duties of Henry Lorenzen who left for the States yesterday where !he will vacation and work with the Salvation Army music staff of the Renton, Wash., area. He plans to return August 20. Johanson and his wife Helga plan to establish permanent residence here. His last place of duty was San Mayor Waino Hendrickson repre- senting the city, the Rev. Sant Mc- | Phetres speaking for the Ministerial | Board, and Dr. James Ryan for the | Salvation Army Advisory Board. | ‘There will be other speakers fromi the Salvation Army group. HBip!{A: NOTES Admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital | yesterday for medical care were Eu- |gene Specht, C. O. Barber and Leslie {Phillips. Fred McRae of Haines en- tered the hospital for surgical at- tention. Leaving the hospital were Mrs. Henry Mead and baby girl and Mrs. Robert Ellis. Alice Bennett of Angoon was ad- mitted to the Government Hospital. ———.- ——— FROM SAUSALITIO Visitors from Sausalito, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Barnesone, are registered at the Baranof Ho- | tel. - PER o o seammen FROM ANCHORAGE Mrs, William J. Wagner of the Alaska Broadcasting Station at An- chorage is among the guests at the Gastineau Hotel. To give your stone tile, linoleu: hardwood floors a beautiful shi polish the easy way, use Johnson's Self-Polishing GLO-COAT. Thi mous wax saves you time and e makes floors gleam without rubbing or buffing. Get Johnson’s GLO-COAT NSON’S GLO-COAT today! JOH Made in by the makers of Johnson’s Wax ______—__—__————— 000#H! HOW YOUR FLOORS SHINE! IT TOOK ONLY A FEW MINUTES WITH JOHNSON’S GLO-COAT ! Ask for Schenley Reserve at your favorite package store and bar r \ | | | Every drop Kent SCHENLEY RESERVE, RARE PRE-WAR SPIRITS * ANCIENT AGE, STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKI ncient S YEARS OLD voduced by ADRIAN £COTT + [ Diected i b CLORD CORTS HAROLD Gl uRMAR "Phantom s, INC. Gandy Goose CARTOON Air Express NEWS For COMIORT and Francisco, Calif., where he spent SERVICE two and one half years. A public reception will be held for | pewey W. Get the NEW the Johansons Saturday night in Metzdort the Salvation Hall on Willoughby| viea-pres - T ASHINOTOMN Ave, to which anyone wishing to and Habit! attend.is invited. Managing Speakers at- the occasion will be Director ALASKANS FEEL AT HOM) at ENJOY RESERVE If you prefer bourbon....you'll like Age ucky straight bourbon. . i QUALITY-BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF 45% GRAIN NEUT EY, 8§ PROOF + SCHENLEY INTL. CORP., N.Y., N. SCHENLEY Lo Good st Y. m or ining s fa- ffort, ROUTE OF THE the U.S.A. I, ALASHK A RIRLINES