The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 5, 1948, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Comfortable Moccasin !MD‘IORTHIAND (0. MAKESHIFTMONDAY 1 | { for Both Lines - Adams | Offered New Position Northland 11(m~puna|mn Com- | pany announced today the removal (of its entire Juneau operation from Green will be enable both companies to ,mmc convenient and efficient ser- ivice to the shipping and traveling putlic, according to Skinner, FREEMAN Shoe Freeman makes the finest. We've all of the season’s Horace O. Adams, Alaska Line : : Juneau agent since 1937, has been is ! ’ smartest styles in thi offered another position with the | famous quality footwear. ccmpany. Mr. Skinner said today. | ;Adnms. now in Seattle, requested itime for consideration of the offer and an announcement ‘gnxd may bke expected in a ,B. a% Bzf‘fm/i ()a QUALITY SINCE 1887 INFORMATION ON | In addition to representing both steamship companies, Green will be {in charge of the operation of lhe Alaska Dock. The dock staff will| Iconsist of John Hagmeier, cashier; Joe Hughes, wharfinger and Ken- I'Em"om VERY {neth Shudshift, assistant wharfinger. . On the steamship office staff will e, — Emplre wsntad. get results? !ke Dave Ramsay, assistant agent; (o NTRAD'UOR {Mrs. Dorothy Gray of the Alaska {Line and Jack Kearney, assistant { lagen' for the Northland. K ‘h J K d ]’ ” The Alaska, due here southbound enne adow | ellSiomorrow wiil dock at the Alaska| ch b Ab tN !Dock, but the Northland’s business | am el' Oll ew | headquarters will remain at the Al k 0“ *City Dock until Monday morning | aska uttice |August 9 when the Northland's off- ice will be opened at the Alaska Kenneth J. & Chief of tne;Dock. Interior Department’s Alaska Fleld| Staff, told the Juneau Chamter of Commerce today that he has loundepw (HA"GES “‘S information on Alaska to be interest- ing, enlightening and “contradic- % tory.” Kadow was principal speaker MEET'"G S(“EDIH‘E at the Chamber’s regular weekly! 1] luncheon at the Baranof Hotel Gold | S'I'AR'I'S '""s MONTH Room today He declared that Alaska has many | proklems but explained that these| g occ and Professional Wo- i problems are different. from thc»;e[n“_“g Club today Annbiificad i thes of Africa, for instdnce, Where alyiceq gchedule of meetings for the population already exists. Kadow, grouy: stated that considerable damage has " pgoncetorth the first Monday of been done by persons who haveleach month will be regular moon| spoken of Alaska's resources with-|y,....o. Bleating ‘6 nelocad wt] out considering the practical '““"‘”]lh» Baranof Hotel. of exploiting them. ! Th second Monday of the month! Some people say that Alaska has/ .., .o & ‘Eriow’ Your .Olib Mem- unlimited resources and others say|por.c. Teotie; a6 8130, i S04 it hasn't, he stated. This and other Episcopal Church. By, contradictions was the main réa-| ‘npere will be no Hesting oh Abe] son for the creation of his Job,|yyig Monday of the month Kadow expldined. He said that some | o ¢ h Monday Wi]l. i government agencies have actually | ;. . program meeting at noon at hindered the « Territory's develop- iy, paranos Hotel. ment and it is his job to find out| e rincp evening mesting i what damage has been done a"d'ncd for Monday, August 9:at the how to overcome it. He ex-l .o nro el may,. Hwile) tHel: plained that his principal task is m'husbfinds or other ghieke o He coordinate the work of all govern- |evening sessions and are asked to ment agencies, in Alaska, with thfll‘telephone rservations not latev than of private initiative so that (he.cm“m” noon o 41 ob . Territory's resources can be de- P i 5 SEATTLE VISITORS He said that he will funnel in-/ formation and problems directly to mflmgnsv Seattleites regtstel;ed at Secretary of the Interior J. A. Krug o e Baranof Hotel are Elizabeth for action, thus saving atout three|Vauehan, H.'G. Heaton and L. F. months in normal communications. | Blake. Thor Hafstad, President of the ‘Wrangell Chamber of Commerce, in- vited Juneauites to attend the; ™ o Wrangell “Stikine Stampede” cele- | " z bration in honor of the 50th anni- versary of the cofmunity's gold rush. Other guests included Kadow's! assistant, Carl M. D'Epiro; H. G. A. Meili, American Airiines Represen- tative from Zurich, Switzerland; Dr. Floyd Woolcott, Fairbanks phy- sician; R. B. Fox, Menlo Park, Cali- fornia wholesale lumberman; H. G.1 § Heaton, Libby, McNeill and Libby and Dr. R. P. Westover, of Seattle. DETROIT, Aug. 5—P—The Ford Motor Co., announces price increases averaging five percent on all new Ford cars except one model. They amount to $75 on each car. At the same time the company reduced the price of its six-cylinder business coupe by $5. Ford sald it was forced to raise prices for the second time in less than two months because of higher material and labor costs and the “necessity for reducing present pro- duction volume due to material shortage which cause production in- terruptions.” - > MRS. SMITH LEAVES Mrs. Joyce Smith left yesterday via Pan American Airways for Seattle. She will visit with her son, Markus Russell, until he re- enters school in the fall. ——————— | FROM WASHINGTON STATE A resident of Mount Vernon, Wash,, Miss Margie McKee is visit- | ing Alaska, and is at the Baranof | Hotel. YE F U L — Screen Actress Virginia Mayo smilingly poses in fetching bathing suit during relaxing ‘moment in Hollywood. Henry Green Will Be Agent! the City Dock on lower Franklin ) | Street to the Alaska Dock, effective ' Monday morning, August 9. | In connection with this move, G |'W. Skinner, President of the Alas- |ka Steamship Company, announced |today from Seattle that Henry agent for the Alaska | teamship Company in addition to) | continuing his representation of the | { Northland Jeint operation of the one dock {has been planned as a means to! offer al in this re-| few | tday: ; {ing with “loyalty” ! TO JiM BECKER MARATHON 1. Jack Holden, England. 2. Charies Heirendt, Luxemburg. 3. Gerald Cote, Canada. 400 METER RELAY 100 METERS 1. Mdl Patton, U.S.A. 2. Lloyd LaBeach, Panama. 3. Barney Ewell, U.S.A, 200 METERS 1. Mel Patton, US.A. 1. U.S.A. (Ewell, Patton, Dillard, 2. Lloyd LaBeach, Panama. i Coswell). . Jam: 2 3. Barney Ewell, U.S.A. 5 A‘fl"fl’. 400 'METERS 1,600 METER RELAY L 1. U.S.A. (Whitfield, Bolen, Guida, 2. Geor e Guida, US.A. rris Curotts, Australia. |, ,a‘,f,:r":'cr‘:f‘"" : 3. Australia. €00 METERS J 1. Leo Horst-Sorensen, Denmark 2. Mal Whitfield, U.S.A. 3. Arthur Wint, Jamaica. 1,500 METERS 1. Lennart Strand, Sweden. 2. Henry Eriksson, Sweden. 3. Goesta Berkvist, Sweden. 110 METER HURDLES 1. Bill Porter, U§A 2. Craig Dixon, U.! 3. Clyde Seott, U.S.. A. 400 METER HURDLES 1. Roy Cochran, U.S.A 2. Jeff Kirk, US.A. 3. Dick Ault, US.A, 5,000 METERS POLE VAULT ‘ % l!mllel %nlamog’uchoslgxakim ; fi,, l:l-h:flll‘!?'.l.d 3’“{?“5".‘;' U.S.A. S 3 er ichards, U.S.A. 3. Viljo Heino, Finland. 3. Guinn Smith, US.A. 10,000 METERS HIGH JUMP l Emile Zatopek, Czechoslovakia. 2. Viljo Heino, Finland. 3. Jeno Szilagyi, Hungary. 3,000 METER STEEPLECHASE 1. Raphael Pujazon, France. 2. Tore Sjostrand, Sweden. Finla; 1. Alan Paterson, Scotland 2. George Stanich, U.S.A. 3. John Winter, Australia. BROAD JUMP 1. Willie Steele, U.S.A. 2. Herb Douglas, US.A. 3. Lorenzo Wright, USS.A. 3. Paavo Siitaloppi, mony to the Senate Invesllganng | Committee earlier this week Lhnl‘ he resigned his Naval Reserve Com % mission “by request” in thé spring | of last year. EF S o TR T ‘ BEQUIZZED "Nt rou o Will Not Give Reasons MOUNT TAMGAS Why Naval Reservist About three-fourths of the mail Asked to Resign (carried on a PAA DC-4 which; WASHINGTON, Aug. 5—{P—Sec-[ert B. Clifton, U. S. Post Office| |crashed last October on Mount, Tamgas at Annette Island has been cefore Senate investigators, refusetl from the crash scene after climbing Commission in the Naval Reserve.| clined to turn over the Navy's se-|this month to make sure. Deep snows cret files on Remington. | still cover parts of the crash scene. All cited President Truman's or- by der against making public files deal- | investigations. WASHINGTON, Aug. 5. M-H! Sullivan told the Senators, how- {swer questions about Remington. year. Chairman Ferguson (R-Mich.) of| That is a concrusion reached by | the Senate Imvestigating Subcom-jgovernment authorities in a studY‘ Congress from getting ‘facts -on a ing the 18 years, 1930 through 1947. matter “vital to the seeurity” of. :he\ The analysis showed that con-| country. sumption of fishery products in this Thie Naval officers who refiised tocountry has been generally upward, surrender the files were Rear Admi- ;flnfl‘ 1932, except for a setback dur- | rals C. C. Hartman, Assistant Chief|ing the war years when the armed of the Burean of Personnel; T. B. forces tcok an unusually large pro-! Unglis, Chief of Naval Intelligence; Portion of the supply. { and George L. Russell, Navy Judge| But, during tne past three years, Advocate. | civilian consumption has mgained‘ Remington, 30, is one of the gov-\itg pre-war level. ernment officials named in con—| The review was prepared by the gressional hearings as having sup-|Bureau of Agricultural Econmmcs‘ plied information to a Communist|in cooperation with the Fish and; “spy ring” during the war. He has|Wildlife Service and the 'rmu, denied that, but disclosed in testi- Commission. PAGE 'IWO S il i THE,DA",‘Y f\LASKA HVIPIRE——!QNEAU ALASKA & THURSDAY AUGUST 5, 1948 HOW THE OLYMPICS LOOK. SHOT PUT 1. Wilbur Thompson, U.S.A. 2. Francis Delaney, U.S.A. 8. ¥im Fuchs, US.A. DIsCuUs 1. Fortune Gordien, U.S.A. 2. Adolfo Consolini, Italy. 3. G. Tosi, Italy. - JAVELIN 1. T. Hyytiainan, Finland. 2. Steve Seymour, U.S.A. 3. Aterwaal, Finland, HAMNER THROW 1. Bosse Ericsson, Sweden. 2. Imre Nemeth, Hungary. 3. Bob Bennett, U.S.A. | HO?, STEP AND JUMP 1. 3eorge Avery, Australia. 2 Lennart Mober{. weden. 3. Gerardo Oliveria, Brazil. 10,000 METER WALK 1. Joseph Dolezal, Czechoslovakiz. 2. Werner Hardmo, Swedeu. 3. Kalie Revneke, So. Airica. 50,000 METER WALK 1. Harry Forbes, England. 2. Edgar Brunn. Norway. 3. Rex Whitlock, England. DECATHLON 1. Bob Mathias, U.S.A. 2. Enrique Kistenmacher, Argen- 4 tina. 3. Irving Mondschein, U.S.A. 'WARNE TO ATTEND INITIAL MEETING OF ALASKA COM. Assistant Secretary of the Interior William H, Warne will be present at the initial meeting of the Alaska Field Committee, which is sched- uled to meet in Anchorage on Tues- | day. Rex Lee, Assistant Director of Territories, will accompany cn his Alaska trip. The Alaska Field Committee has been organized to coordinate work of the Interior | range development program for the r"m' of the Navy Sullivan, haled | | Inspector. Cliftow returned last night | Territory. Kenneth Kadow has been | appointed chairman of the commit- " today to say why William W. Re-lthe rugged mountainside to recover | [tee and the members of the com-| mington was asked to resigh his|what mail he could find. | mittee are directors of th Interior ! H said that some had been burned |agencies. Leaving for Anchorage on| Sullivan was called to the Senatetand assumed the balance had also|Sunday will te Kadow, (oftice building after three Admirals|peen destroyed by fire but will make | assistant, Carl Depiro, Don Foster, refused the information and de- another trip up the mountain later|Alaska his chief Native Service, Clarence | Rhodes, Fish and Wildlife Service, | Alfred Kuehl, National Park Srvice, | jand Joe Morgan, i mation. Bureau of Recla- Assistant Secretary Warne, Col.| you are an average civilian MVINg|; 1y g Noyes, Director of the Alas- ever, he would ask Mr. Truman for |\ the continental United States, y, poaq Commission, Mr. Lee and | jauthority for Naval officers to an-|YoU ate 108 pounds of fish Ias“Mr Kadow will return to the States | lover the Alaskan Highway at the conclusion of the Anchorage meet- ing. The American Consul at Ed- mittee protested the order blocks jof the commercial fish business dur- { monton, Alberta has planned ten- tatively to join the group at F‘au—‘ kanks. Kadow will return with his | family on September 6. - - - TWO FROM WRANGELL Two Wrangell men, John 8. Si- vertsen and Thor Hofstad, are in | town and are guests at the Baranof | Hotel. JRSE RETURNS Christine A. Heller of the De- partment of Health is back from a trip to the Westward and is registered at the Hotel Juneau. blessed with the wofiis most Warne | the | agencies in' recovered it was said today by Rob-|Alaska and to fermulate a long-| ——— | | JUNEAU DISTRI(T | ' SCHOOL DIRECTORS | GAME SCHEDU 8:45 o'clock, tut the douh]ehem will be played' Saturday beginning at 3:45 in the afternoon. The orig] FOR Atl ; nal schedule called for a single ga faturday and the doubleheaddh Sundly. Tn place of the twin bill, the fin; game of the series will be nine in MEET LAST MIGHT = REVISED TODAY | The Board of Directors of the Ju- ' The schedule for the Anchorage- Eunday afternoon. The three pre~ ineau Independent School District jJuneau baseball games to begin to- | vious games will be seven inning adopted two ordinances at a meet- |morrow night has been changed in | contests. ing held Tuesday evening. The first an effort to permit those taking PEE O P <2 incorporated was the rules and by- part in the Salmon Derby to attend ~0! laws of the Board and the second the final game of the serfes Sunday HERE FROM WHITEHORSE ., |provided for assessment, levslnL, afternoon. Mr. and Idrs. J. Paterson of jand colle¢tion of taxes within the| As planned, the first. game will. Whitehorse, Y. T., are among the’ area of the School District outside iget underway tomorrow mght At new arfivals at the Baranof Hnm' the Juneau city limits. - I i The members of the Board will| 4 {sit as a Board of Equalization (af hear claims for adjustment of as-‘ sessments, which were seft out last week. Meetings have been scheduled itor the evenings of August 16, 17, 18 and 19 in the office of the Super- | |intendent of Schools and each meet- | ing will begin at 7:30 o'clock. The Board decided to launch an investigation of the neeg of a school | |in the Auk Bay area. A question- {naire will be sent to all familie |living between the Airport and Tec AR W W Ramn Bg " The l‘riangle " Cléanets 2 Fisherman's I.uck o S Good work plus prompt | Haror requesting the number and and courteous service is \a ges of all children in the family. |- MORE than “luek” at | A pre-registration day for all stu- Triangle! It’s 'Positive {dents who have not been previously ) (?UAI,{ZANTF};‘T)Y) oy tenrolled in Juneau schools will be {held the morning of September 2 at 9 o'clock. Pupils éntering kinder- lgarten will not have to report at this time. ‘The Board accepied the resigna- tion of Miss Payllis Grant, who has been instructor in home economices | and girl’s p! cal education for the ‘ past five years. Miss Grant has Te- cevied an assistantship from Ore- gon State College at Corvallis and jwill centinue work on her Master’s | Degrc‘e. i Stewart Washburn, who attended | (Amherst College and was gmdmled‘ frem . Middlebury College in Vfl-l mont, has been appointed to the position of mathematies ins‘truclm" |He is replacing Mrs. Judson Whit-! For better Appearance CALL {tier. Washburn taught at the| |Breadloaf School of English last| iyear. ‘ D | ' NOTICE i w We will not be responsible for | any bills made except by ourselves. | | Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Werncr.! 937 3t| FREE DELIVERY Meatls HUTCHINGS ‘5=l '} Phone ECONOMY 92.95 j553 MARRKET wwr DELIVERY SPECIALS—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 'S Save on your Food Bill . . . SHOP At HUTCHIENGS MARKET . . . '{ You Will Always Find the Finzst in FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLES at ‘ HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET 1 HEINZ 1 Ib. can BAKED BEANS 2 for 41 ¢ WITH PORK Heinz 154 oz. can cooked SPAGHETTI 16t s ? IN TOMATO SAUCE 1 31b.canSWIFT'NING SHORIENINESI 31 Pint WESSONOIL -- - - { BESTFOOD MAYONNMSE NO LIMIT AVOSH...I.lghI RN | NO. 2 CAN Reliance No. 2%- @n PEARS GallonPUREX - - - - - - DREFT SOAP POWDER - - - Your Phone Orders will receive prompt atiention al all fimes. Qel 10:30 A. M, 2:30 P. M. and 4:30 . M. At HUTCHINGSM will find the BEST IN MIEATS AT ALUTIMES! -

Other pages from this issue: