The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 1, 1948, Page 2

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PAGE TWO ~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1948 Bright Ideas for the School 1 < ‘“that it is expected to use sails at| | | Corduroys . . . Nothing better than genuine HOCKMEYER cords for wear plains in the new flared or ruf- — comes in Grey and Brown fled styles. Sizes 8 to 14. mix. Sizes 4 to 18. H $6.50 and $7.50 Price Only $4.50 1 Others $4.50 up l : Bl s Shirts and Sport Shirts . . . - rayons and cotto_nfl, short and ' in wools, cottons, flannels and long sleeves, white and pastel rayons, short and long sleeves, colors. plain and fancy patterns. Sizes 4 to'14 ' Sizes 4 to 18 $175 up nau : in all wool flannel, plaids and | | | Coats . .. in 1009% wool — real smart styles in the new flare black. Also reversibles with matching hoods. Sizes 7 to 16. Jackets . . . in wool plaids and water repel- lent poplins, lined and unlined, short and stag lengths, button and zipper fronts. Sizes 4 to 16. From $3.00 up Dresses ... our own- exclusive line — the “Cinderellas” styles are very outstanding, all are fast color to washing. Sizes 8 to 6x and 7 to 14. Prices are from $2.50 up Trousers - . . Tweeds, twills, whipcords in cottons, wools and part wools. Sizes 4 to 20. Prices from $3.50 up Don’t forget Her Panties, Anklets, Slips; Oxfords and - Boots Don’t forget His Shirt and Shorts, Belts, Sox, Gloves, Ties, Tennis Shoes and Overshoes B M Bebrnds Co QUALITY ~ SINCE /88T U NEWS TRy Davis, skipper, Stan Grycowitch, cook; Art McMenomy, Dick Palmer SCRIPPS' VACHT 22 FROM SAN DIEGO‘ OPEMING OF SCHOOLS :"i‘s’o,’fitf,‘:,_ saxAGENENT . With only a few days remaining un- | Will be under the direct manage- The 90-foot yacht, Novia Del Mar. |ty the school bells will ring calling | ment of the Alaska Film Exchange, owned by John Scripps of the|everyone back to school, teachers|owned and operated by W. D. Scripps-Howard newspaper chain, | for the Juneau schools are arriving | Gross. Due fo the late arrival of docked in Juneau yesterday and is|on every steamer. |the new machine operator, the expected to depart for her return, Arriving on the Baranof were |theatre will be closed umtil Sun- trip to Vancouver, B."C., sometime | nrics Avis Aamot, who will be a | day night. The new management tomorrow when the Scripps pParty firgt grade teacher and Miss Rosa- | plans to-be open six nights weekly returns aboard from a flight 10 jine A, Hermes, who will teach the | with the show changing three times Sitka. | fifth grade. |a week. Tuesday night there will Making her longest cruise of the| Teachers registered at the Hotel |be no show. The theatre has been year, the Del Mar is up from San | Jjuneauare Miss Emily Madsen, who | under lease to Charles Tuckett of Diego, Calif., and has stopped at will be English and Journalism in- |Douglas for the past several years. several Southeast Alaska ports en-|structor in the Juneau High School, e route to Juneau. Mr. and Mrs.|and Miss Ruth M. Johnson, who' A. F. Florence arrived in Juneau Beripps and four guests from La|will be eighth grade instructor. Miss | Tuesday from Ketchikan, and is at Jolla, met the yacht at Vancouver | Madsem is from Duchesne, Utah|the Baranof Hotel. and will disembark at that point on and Miss Johnson is from Albert ‘the return voyage. From there the Lea, Minn. | party expects to fly to San Diego, Miss Dolores Matilla, of Iron| with the yacht expected there about | Mountain, Minn., who will be school | Sept. 25. |murse, is also staying at the Hotel | Crew members said tne complete Juneau. trip up was made under power, but | HOME AND INDUSTRIAL il - |« 1 || ROCK WOOL—ALUMINUM Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Ford of || WEA STRIPPING various points when returning. | Merced, California, are at the Bar- |{ ywarde A, Johnson—Phone 344 Crew members aboard are "Sam anof Hotel. ————— |1n the District Court for the Terri- ! LAST TALKS BEING MADE, BOTH SIDES Walkout, If There Is One, N Starts One Minute After o A . Midnight Tonight | (Continued trom Page One) | partment today it could not com-i { plete its poll of 11,000 West Coast | | maritime workers on the highl | seas before October 1. i The action possibly may force a postponement of a Pacific Coast maritime strike threatened for to- || morrow. ] A court order obtained by the i government under the Taft-Hartley ‘ Act has prevented a strike for 80 fday& The order expires tomorrow. The Justice Department is re- quired to ask the court to end this injunction, issued last June 15 I'hen the strike originally. was threatened on the Pacific Coast. ' The NLRB, however, must certify may be avoided and, should there) AlASKA" wAR DEAD be a strike, that it will not be long. 2 “Everywhere I have talked to our % wlll BE lAID To agents, Chambers of Commerce and DIA( V :people with whom we do businessi BE R ( g L 1and I have found relations friendly,” | o 1 4 P REST ON SUNDAY cwar seusir ‘o “whenwusi- — COASTAL” RIDER (tioned about the alleged ill-feeling B {Letween Alaska and the Alaska S. ey kan war dead will be laid in their transportation operation in the Ter- |Ndian Service Secures tinal resting place at the Sitka Na-|ritory. We have served Alaskans| tional Cemetery onh Sunday morn-/conscientiously and intend to con- Lafger Cfafl 10 Sefve killed in the Aleutians during World |of Alaska as well as the major ones”| Alaska Communities War II, will be buried. In ntt;en-! Admiral Zeusler, whose trip has! dance at the service will be Gov- been one On inspéction of all his| With full military* honors, Alas-;S. Co. “Our company is the oldest ing, September 5. 98 men, who were |tinue our service to the lesser ports SEATTLE, Sept. 1.—(P—The %it- ernor Ernest Oruening and, rep- company’s operations, will release a' . wooden motorship North Star,! resentatives of . the “Armis Navy, Pepost ©u His ip when he FEUENS|ygferan of gneAtotic and Arttarctie, Coast Guam’. Marine Corps, Air|to e. ; 'may be making her final voyage to Corps, American Legion and the| He left by Ellis Airlines today for | o' north for the Alaska Native Veterans of Foreign Wars. | Ketehikan; arrived here Tuesday Service. She sailed from Seattle The ceremony will open: 8unday |from Anchorage by Pacific Northern. j.c'\ o sor northern outposts: morning at 9:30 o'clock with Chap- Avquisition of a newer and larg- . . : . NEW FBI MAN b - ; lain Patrick J. McDwyer delivering 4 cargo ship, the Coastal Rider, e er the invocation. Two services will) be presented with @haplain John[ F. Chalker delivering the Protest-| ant service and Chaplain McDwyer, | the Catholic service. | Rear Admiral’ Joseph Stika, Com- Dan Brien, Resident Agent fcr thez Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion, has been transferred to the| States and Curtis Irwin has been | appointed his successor. The Ter- | by the Government Service was ap- proved by the Maritime Commis- sion yesterday, a report received here said. The Commission reportedly ap- i District, will present the wreath are located in Anchorage. ander of the 13th Coast Guard ritorial headquarters for the FBI|proved transfer of the Coastal Rid- jer from jurisdiction of the Mari- .- i time Commission ‘to the Depart- honoring the Coast Guard dead and | - Governor Ernest Gruening will pre-| sent the wreath honoring the un-| known military dead. Representa- tives of the U. S. Army in Alaska,| DR. NOVATNEY LEAVES | Dr. Dorothy Novatney, Educ:monf ment of Interior for use by the Alaska Native Service. The deal had been pending for the results of an election among the workers on the last contract offer before the Justice Department | dcts to end the strike ban. H e i i 1 IMPROVEMENT PLANS . " FOR JUNEAU AIRPORT | ~ BEPRESENTEDTOC. (.| - —— ! A ‘report on the imfprovement ! program for the Juneau Mumcipali Airport will be presented by Mayor Wi Hendrickson and Tom Dyer at the noon meeting of the Cham- ber of Commerce tomorrow. Mayor Hendrickson and Dyer returned! from Anchorage this week after con-{ ferring with Walter Plett, Regional| Director of the CAA and .General! Atkinson of the U. S. Air Force in; Alaska. Also on the agenda will be, a discussion of the housing situa-} tion in Juneau. SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION No. 5946-A tory of Alaska, Division Number; One. At Juneau. H JOHN E. HEIDELBERGER, Plain- | tiff, vs. MARY IRENE, HEIDEL- | BERGER, Defendant. ‘ The President of the United States of America. To the above | named defendant, GREETING: You | are’ hereby required to appear in ' the District Court for the Territory | of Alaska, Division No. 1, at Juneau, | Alaska, withiy thirty (30) days after | the last publication of this sum- mons, in case this summons is pub- lished, or within forty (40) days|( after the date of its service upon you, in case this summons is served | upon. you personally, and answer the planitif’s complaint on file in said court and in the above entitled cause, The plaintiff in said action de- mands the following relief: a dis- solution of the parties’ marriage on the grounds of incompatibility of temperament, and any further re- lief merited. In event you fail so to appear and answer the plaintiff will take judg- ment against you for want thereof, and will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint, and as herein stated. Witness the Honorable judge of said court, and the seal of said court, hereunto affixed at Juneau, Alaska, August 11, 1948. (Seal of Court) J. W.LEIVERS, Clerk of the above entitled court. By: LOIS ESTEPP, . Deputy Clerk. First publication, Aug. 11, 1948. Last publication, Sept. 1, 1948. HAESH R WILL you be able to con- tinue your busines if fire destroys your premises? Business Interruption Insurance will pay for Erupective earnings, eep capital and credit unimpaired, and pay the salaries valued em- ployees until your busi- ness is restored. Ask this Hartford agency about it. AT the 17th Naval District, the Air| Supervisor of the Territorial De- |weeks. It was a well known fact | s and the Marine Corps will| Partment of Education, is a pas- that the 1450-ton North Star, also be present at the services. The | sehger on the Baranof for the which has heen. serving the route list of representatives will be an-| Westward. She is on the annual ior 12 years, was too small tg carry nounced as soon as word is re-!fall trip for the Edueation Depart- the increased supplies to Alaskan ved from Alaska headquarters of |ment and will be gone six weeks. ‘Indian villages and government - | bases, — \ MRS OSAG" ixRIVES | Future of the North Star is in- IS | Mrs. Katherine Osage of Tacoma |definite, officials of the Native the Army and Navy. A NO STRIKE HOPE OF ALASKA STEAM'S ZEUSLER - veisn iy woveas ‘Icy Straits Salmon Co., Hoonah, Expressing ‘hope that a tie-up|2nd Jack Templin, arrived in Ju- of Alaskan schipping may still be| meau aboard the company’s private avoided, Admiral F. A. Zeusler, Ex- plane today to attend the meet- ecutive Assistant to the President'ing Thursday afternoon of cannery of the Alaska Steamship Company,! operators and the Fish and Wild- was in Juneau today, southboundlife Service officers. after visiting all of the ports in e e ——— cperations. | AT THE GASTINEAU “No one knows better than we do' Ethel Finlayson, Salt Lake City, the dependence of Alaska on con- is staying at the Gastineau Hotel. tinued uninterrupted transporta-|She arrived on Pan American from tion, and I still hope that a strike the South Tues arrived - yesterday via Pan Ameri- Service said. It is understood that rcan Airways for an indefinite stay. the Coastal Rider will require con- She will visit with her son, George {Osage and family. — .o Service trade. The Rider, formerly operated be- tween Seattle and Kuskokwim Riv- er area by Santa Ana Steamship Company under charter, was built in 1945 at Los Angeles. She 3,805 gross tons and 323 feet long. The little North Star was built in 1932 at the cld Berg Shipyard in Ballard. She has been com- manded since 1945 by Capt. Salen- jus, who joined her as third mate when she was a new ship. National recognition was gained by the North Star in 1939 when she carried out an important role in the U. S. Antarctic expedition ON DISPLAY AT FRONT and SEWARD IT’S A BEAUTY siderable alteration for the Native is | directed by Adm. Richard E. Byrd. The North Star is due back in Seattle in November. MISS TILLOTSEN IS HERE _ FROM U-W SUMMER SESSION | Miss Marjorie Tillotsen, who has | been attending summer school at | the University of Washington, ar- | rived from Seattle by Pan Ameri- |can Tuesday. Miss - Tillotsen is | mathematics instructor at Juneau | High ' School. 1 | ———.——— STEWART RETURNS i et B. D. Stewart has refurtied fol- lowing a five-day inspection trip in | this area on the MS Jetry. Stewart, | who is ‘Territorial Comthissioner cf Mines, said that he examined Some interesting prospects ‘that may he of potential value. G . | EMMA AND RAINIER HERE WITH CATCHLY Fish landed at " Juneau * Cold | Storage during the past few days were brought in by the Emma ' which had 11,000 pounds sable and 1,000 pounds halibut, and by the | Rainier loaded” with' 5,000 ‘pounds 'sable and 600 pounds halibut, | MRS. PHILLITS RETURNS Mrs. A. B. Phillips returned on board ' the Princess Lduisé ' after |spending the summer in Seattle. | She has beén ‘attending ‘summer schocl at the University of Wash- ,ington and will resume her posi- tion as language instructor in the | Juneau High School on’ Tuesday. | B o e SABINS RETURN ON PAA f FROM VACATION TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sabin, who {have been vacationing in ' the Puget Sound area for several weeks, | returned to Juneau on Pan Ameri- can plane today. NEW HAVEN, Sept. 1—(®- Charles A. Beard, 73, the noted his - | torian, died today. The historian, author of some 30 books on American history, had i been a patient at a hospital since August 2. His physicians said his death was caused by a plastic anemia. Beard’s most recent hook, pub- lished only last April, stirred up ccnsiderable controversy. AP~ W—%—w THIS $4,700.00 CHRIS-CRAFT Ca'nBe Yom's ALSO AN AWARD 0F $1,000 * ALL PROCEEDS GO TO LOCAL CHARITY including FUNDS for a BETTER FOURTH OF JULY JUIBLEE NEXT YEAR Juneau's Fourth Celebrations are more than FAMOUS.. . . . Let's Keep Them that Way! * Date of Awards... EVENING OF SEPT. 6 Labeor Day " MARVIN KRISTAN Committee Chairman

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