The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 19, 1948, Page 2

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PAGE TWO Za FREEMAN ioe with HAND-SEWN SEAMS i The ush, thick-skinned moccasin leath- ll fo EVASIONIS Boiiermakers Are CHARGED AGAINST Going Back fo Jobs er, handsome Sequoia seam and the easy- fitting last, offer a rare combination and of comfort B. (/]/(. ,B,Eé%fflfié 60. QUALITY SINCE /887 scrviceability. |ROSA PAGE WELCH ' | L | Adm. Seemm Toyoda, who heade; BENNETT MEYERS: Affer 18-Day Sirike ON NOVEMBER 3 i, som s, v heaces R —_— |and Lt. Gen. Hiroshi Tamura,! BALTIMORE, Oct. 19.—#— (By The Associated Press Great interest already is being|who was in charge of allied war in the south. nett E. Meyers, former major gen- A R of L. Boilermakers are re- shown, according to the committee | prisoners. 4 | eral, was indicted today for a $2¢- tyming to work on 120 major con- OR arrangements, in the forthcom- | R | ond time by a Baltimore federal syryction projects in seven western ing concert of Rosa Page Welch,| grand jury on charges of income giates this morning. Their 18-day- Negro mezzo-soptano, who will sing| tax evasion old strike ended Jast night with Wednesday, November 3, in the 20th The wartime second ranking pro- | announcements in Los Angeles and Century Theatre. The program will curement officer of the Alr Forces wman prancisco that 13 local unions be under the joint auspices of the was accured in the new bill of paq yoted to accept a compromise Chapel-ty-the-Lake, the Memorial evading $45,731.37 in taxes between otfer. The settlement was Presbyterian Church and the North- 1942 and 1946 ked out in weekend negotiations ern Light Presbyterian Church. Her He was indicted here last March 7 | Alaska tour is sponsored by the | on a charge of evading $15658 in fz\lnska Presbytery. Her work with employers. 1941 also will include Ketchikan, Metla- - e Meyers, stripped of h:-\i Army rank, POWER INVES"GA‘OR |katla, Wrangell, Sitka, Haines, Skag- term for ncucing & ormer bucnce:| 10 WASHINGTON, D. €, | ne sumeun comittee met_sat- FOR REVIEW; HEARING associate to lie undér to a urday at the home of Mrs. T. A. Senate committee Morgan to perfect plans. In the He was convicted in Washington group were Mesdames Judson Hus- last March. 2 e M. Mor: Bitatad sof the ted, Stanley Baskin, Ralph Wright, U. 8. Bureau of Reclamation’s In-! vestigations of hydro-electric pow- | er potentialities in Alaska, left for %) arence Warfield, Roland Bur- | DOU ." /‘q rows, Hugh Antrim, Walter Sobolef? | h 4L BAF | vington, D, C. this NEWS | Morgan will spend and Anna M. Anderson. Rosa Page Welch, who uses her tin the capitcl where results of the % Eklutna project i stigations are EASTERN STAR TONIGHT Nugget Chapter - No. Order ‘gm of music to improve inter- to be reviewed by the headquarters Eastern Star holds a re; Ar meet- oath ambassador of gocd will.” e 18 FROM WESTWARD racial relations, is acclaimed both an outstanding artist and as an, the Reclamation Bureaw, Bureau of Budget hearings will| ing his evening in th Eagles Hall. also be held on appropriations for v According to announcement, there | ‘he Eklutna hydro-electric power o“ pA(Iflt mk'"[n" plant proposed for construction out- will be initiation and refreshments In from the Westward yesterday ide of Anchorage. i , | All visiting mem s are cordially invited by Worthy Matron Edith -> > = on Pacific Northern Airlines were Barras. z 18 persons. Twelve left from here ML Mrs' Lybe(k Honore for Cordova and Anchorage. SRt O | From Anchorage: Mrs. Robert A H Atwood. 3 Mrs. George Matson and Mrs On B"‘thday, Monday From Cordova: William Dugan, Richard Parsons were two Douglas ! Dan McGraw, Vern McGraw, Fred ladies leaving on the steamer Prin- 1t Lybeck was honored at Fasely, Ward Adams, Cecil McClain, cess Lou Mrs. Matson will Visit |5 urprise birthday party at her Art Franklin, Pete Hagan, James her folks at Wei Idaho, and pome on Monday afternoon. Guests | Brightman, Paul Urick, Walter intends to remain there up to the <o,y (he afternoon sewing and Hermansen, Len Evans, Harry De- Christmas * holidays chatting and Mrs. Lee Hunsaker, Land, Marshall Hoppin. Mr sons will join her hus- yocess jor the affair, served ice| From Yakutat: Mr. and Mrs. Fred band Richiand, Wash.cream cake ansl coffee: . | Milton. 10w employed. ending the birthday party To Cordova: Sally Barnes, Ken o icsdames George Shaw, Steve | Edwards, B. E. Feero, Frank Roch- elle To Anchorage: Bert Kiefer, Olaf Bod- ROBERT MILLER ENLIST: H i JA0TS. r Lundquist, Albert Carl- Charles Bryson, ha}:o:(xxxlll,\(l:d 4\113;"‘”-,1“:, \v:",” vli: E Kolia Albigoff, Hattie McLane, Mrs Rascr)e Spears, Edgar _Suoll, the Signal Corps, assigned to duty WHO IS the houseguest of Mrs. Al- Frank Bell, Tom Chase, Wlhrefl with the A Juneau. Miller is Pigoff Johnstone, Charles Hale, Arneil a Navy veteran, receiving his U. 8 atigect o Petrie. d N. discharge in July, 1946 MARINE INSPECTOR | - 4 - HERE FOR TWO DAYS RIVERS TO FAIRBANKS i — Attorney General Ralph G. Riv- COMING AND GOING Lt. Commander A. J. Larsen of ers went to Fairbanks today by porirbrie ¢ Coast Guard Marine Inspection | PAA to take evidence in two In- A, Verle Collar, assistant € Ketchikan arrived in Ju- dustrial Board cases. He will be field deputy of {he Anchorag today. He will leave this af- in Anchorage by Monday to attend headquarters office, Internal Re {,y Haines and return the CAB hearing on the Alaska enue Service, is in Juneau for sev- li morrow for @ two day stay. Service case, which is concerned eral days before going to the yone erested in Marine In- c Ketchikan office 4 ipection activities is asked to get ! for extensions of their routes and | George Osage, head of the Ju- in touch with Lt, Commander Lar- for extra service for various parts neau office left yesterday by PAA sen at the Gastineau Hotel. lof Alaska. for Tacoma, Wash, on his two- - The Attorney General expects to Read the Want-Ads for bargains. | retmn Oectober 3., week annual leave. ) | police found 60 tons of dynamite | ! the past. T0 GIVE CONCERT | scoro SIGHTSEERS — Mrs. Corinne Neal Cook (left), lisher of the Texas Mosquito at Mesquite, Tex., and Miss Beatrice Cobb, editor of the Morganton observation tower of the R.CA visit while en route to Europe. the North Carolina S TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1948 HOSPITAL NOTLS Admitted to St. Ann's Hospital yesterday for medical attention were A ritaalistic contest was held be- | yawrence Sandboe and Johh Frem- tween the Degree Teams of the Cor- | i, Discharged were Mrs. Paul FOR MoosE 'N 1949 [dova and Sitka Lodges and Sitka Harvey and daughter . won the coveted cup for the second Gabriel Steppitin ci St. Paul Is- | time. land and A I gnes Trososs of Wran- The Fifth Annual Convention of | T T T | gell Institute were admitted to the the Alaska Moose Association will Government Hospital yesterday. te held in Juneau in the fall of Eowm I" S“w‘m' JR' Rita and Sammy Adams were dis- 1949. Juneau was chosen as the ls BoR" YESTERDAY charged from the Government Hos- convention spot at the conference pital yesterday. in Cordova, which concluded on Sun- day. All the Juneau officers and| A SOn was born to Mr. and Mrs. delegates returned yestirday via.|FdWin Stewart in St. Ann's Hos- Pacific Northern Airlines from Cor- | Pital yesterday afternoon. The baby dova. | has been named Edwin Lee, Jr., and | Paul J. Orick, press reporter at|il the first child for Mr. and Mrs. the conference, stated, “the.Dele-| Stewart. Edwin Lee weighed seven | gates will hold a warm spot in their | POUnds seven ounces at birth. [hearts for the folks at the Moose | Proud grandparents are Mr. and {Conference in Cordova. Everyone|Mrs. R. L. Stewart, Edwin Stewart really had a wonderful time and |iS employed by the Bureau of Rec- the high tradition of Alaskan hos_‘lamatmn and left this morning on pitality was upheld by the Cordova | Survey trip to the Taku River. Lodge.” i B o At the business session on Satur- | FROM KETCHIKAN day, Harry Deland of Juneau Was| y Thatcher, broker, of Ketchi- | named as Athletic Diréctor for the y., s at the Baranof Hotel. Eastward Section of Alaska, and i | Everett Gillette was named to di- rect the Westward Section of Alas- FROM VANCOUVER ka for the Moose Order. | L. H. Bergman, represcntative of Members of various lodges were| Canadian Industries, Ltd., Vancouy- henored by receiving the Fellowship er, B. C., is at the Baranof Hotel. conferred by the Supreme Officers. | This Degree is conferred on mem- | bers who have done outstanding work fér the Loyal Order of Moose. WHITEHORSE JUNEAU KETCHIKAN SEATTLE NOME Swift, convenient flights in big 4-engine Clippers. You'll enjoy delicious food, expert service —as a guest of Pan American, world’s most ex- perienced airline. Ask for details and reservations atase BARANOF HOTEL ‘Telephone 106 NORTHLAND SAILINGS Steamers tied up at Seattle by present Longshore coastwise strike. HENRY GREEN, AGENT—TELEPHONE 109 et NORTHLAND TRANSPOfiAUON 0. SERVING SOUTHEASTERN ) ALASKA CEPFWRABLY pub- , N. C. News-Herald, stand on . Building in New York dwing Miss Cobb also is secretary of tate Press Association. INTERNATIONAL NEWS BREVITIES (By The Associated Press) Secretary of State Marshall talk- ed to Pope Pius XII. He was re- turning frem a check of the bogged down Greek campaign against the | Greek Communists. Syngman Rhee of Mac- | President South Korea called on Gen Arthur in Tokyo. Back in Korea, planted on a road leading to Rhee's | palace. Communists have been! blamed for such tactics there in war filed Japanase | otne crimes charges against Russia and the Soviet Ukraine jabstained from the 9-0 Security, | Council vote on a Syrian resolu- tion which demanded a cease fire in Palestine and instructed Media- tor Ralph Bunche to negotiate, a settlemeni of the Negev dispute. Both later voted for the cease fire, ! itinerary | but shied away from the negotia- | tion angle in a reconsideration of the resolution by sections. s AR ST. ROCH RETURNS FROM ROUGH TRIP . IN_ARCTIC SEAS VANCOUVER, B. C,-Oct. 19.—(® —The R. C. M. P. Arctic Patrol ship St. Roch is in harbor today after a 17,000-mile foray into polar seas. Under command of Inspector Har- 9 ry Larsen of Victoria, Canada’'s Arc- tic-wise policeman-explorer, the “toughie” of northern waters had a near-brush with disaster in an Are- tic ice-pack out from Herschel Island, near the Mackenzie River mouth. She was in danger of being froz- en-in until mid-1949, tut she bucked her way through heavy winds and rough seas to safety. On Sept. 11, the ship Point Barrow, on Alaska’s tiy headed for home. She had away since June, 1947. - e ELIZABETH THOMPSON IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF BADMINTON (LUB Mrs, Elizabeth Thompson was el- | ected President of the Juneau Bad- minton Club at their meeting last evening. Stanley Baskin was ch en as Vice-President and M Daphne Inman was installed Secretary and Treasurer Mrs. Thompson announced that later in the year there would be ladies’ and men’s singles tourna- ment and also a mixed doubles| reached d been as| i with applications by several airlines | tcurnament. ‘The club’s next regular meeting | will be next Monday night in the| Juneau High School gymnasium, Anyone wishing to join the club 1% eordially invited to attend, H | Worthington, had been appointed | Negroes in northern U. S. indus- 10 REPORTED INJURED, MINE STRIKE, FRANCE By CARL HARTMAN PARIS, Oct. 19.—(P—Forty per-| sons were injured when police and | mine strikers (clasked near St. | Eteinne, the semi-official news| ncy France Presse sald toda; The outbreak central France‘r rred, e a y said, when pickets attacksd police cceupying | Roche La Molier mine. Eight strik- ! When you're Judged by your ers were arrested { % The strikers used stones and. hospitallty, scraps of metal and the police re-: & i plied with tear gas bombs, ! there is only { Elsewhere in France pickets and | = &% ry Bchentey troops and . police massed for a| one choice. .. /%Z W @""iilfl;" 5 d showdown in the coal strike. Puhhc[ services brcke down in the north- ern coal fields. Mines were floodml &4 Whiskey 90.8 Proof. 57%% Grain Neutral Spirits. Copr. 1948, Schenley Distillers Corp., N.Y.C. HAVE YoU EVER HAD TO WRITE A " LETTER LIKE THIS Occupation of threatened .\r,u'.x‘ eontinued. Police took over a power | plant at Carmaux despite a Growd | of 1000 stril s - LEMAY IS NEW BOSS STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND WASHING TON, Oct ! Gen. Curtis day as the r comma LeMay, veteran of air campaigns in Loth Europe and the Pacific dur- ing World War II, came here Sun- day from Germany where he was chief of U. S. Air Forcs in Europe. He succeeds Gen. George C. Ken- fey, who has been assigned to head the air uniV'L‘l'SlLy at Maxwell Base, Ala. LeMay spent yesterday conferring with Air Secretary Smyington, Chiet f Staff Hoyt S. Vandenberg, and other officials at the Pentagon. This morning he sat down to his desk at SAC headquarters, at near- Ly Andrews Base, Md. CANADIANS WiLL GET BUSY NOW ON DEFENSE PLANNING OTTAWA, Oct. 19—#—Detense minister Brocke Claxton announced today a Canadian expert on ar- mored warfare, Maj. Gen. F. F. 19 —M—Lt. LeMay took over to- of the strategic Dear Doctor 5 I'm awfully sorry to have to say this, but at the time it's impossible for me to pay anything on my bill. Certainly, excuses make poor payments, but you're entitled to an explanation and here it is, Ever since the baby arrived, we've had to struggle to make ends meet. We badly underestimated the expense of another mouth to feed, even though a little mouth. Then, a series of financial set-backs in my own business have complicated things still further, It's been bad planning on my part from start to finish and, I'm ashamed to say, we had no reserve to fall back on. Like a lot of other people, we never expected to feel the pinch and didn’t prepare for it. I know this kind of letter doesn’t help you meet your own expenses, but please bear with us a while longer. I will muke every attempt to settle up soon. ‘Thanks for your patience. . co-ordinator of the nation’s civil defense planning. The big job of the 58-year-old retired general will ‘be to supervise plans for civil defense to go into operation should war come, Worth- ington is a native Scotland. - FROM BELLINGHAM Bessie Van Gilde? of Bellingham, Wash., is a guest at the Gastin eau Hotel. Sincerel; ¥" John Dos Here's a situation that occurs many times every year +..every week..,every day! Bul—there’s one way to guard against it: BUY US. SAVINGS BONDOS on the Payroll Savings Plan DR FROM MT. EDGECUMBE Here from Mt. Edggcumbe and at the Baranof are George W. Fe- doroff and Max W. Penrod. The death rate from rheumatic heart disease is higher among 4rigl citi>s than among white children, | This Is an oficial.U. S. Treasury a ‘yertisement~prepared under auspices of Treasury Bepartment and Adyerfigng Counch,

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