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I eeeeseessasens PAGE EIGHT JUNEAU CHURCHES SDECAL SERVICES, THAKKSGIVING DAY holding mark ng Day. the First at 11 ‘hanks- service will | tomorrow Presby 10:30 o'clock music Chaire : er, We Thank Tuee man’s sermon Wwill be Praise, pPra and Th and the off g for the y P ed in the New Church Bui Fund. t Holy Ti: The Ve wi er will be Com- 3 FIRST FieLD UNIT IS ALASKA GROUPNOW EHROTE O BEkE S 4 S ON BEA CH— Three pretty mannequins sun themselves on beach at Perth, Australia. Left to right: June Mallett, Dawn Fraser and Nola Rose, “Miss Pacific 1948.” Fhg Christian Demotratsi Win Etalian Election ROME, Nov, 24—~ From Verona surgical team of jn the north to Cati the cne doctor and two nurses from ! couth, Christian Democ con- The first groups in Alaska to join Mt. Edgecumbe Orthopedic Hospit- tinued to win over Communists and the Federal credit union m were 2l, stopped in Juneau last night!extreme left Socalists in municipal he tor] Federal employ- crroute to the Alaska Native Ser-|elections Sunday. hese groups ap- vice F ital at Bethel They| Results of elections in 29 com- ed for charters from the Federal rlan to leave today, for Anchorage | munities wed Christian Demo- ency which will be grant- | aboard PNA {crats victors in 24, the remaining near future he ical team, iirst of its five going to Communists ex- National Federatiod of Fed-' kind to ke sent out on a field trip, | tr left Soc.alists. eral Employees took d several w at the| Of the 461 cquncilmen elected in ganizing a credit C ospital, giving 3 g rities, 341 were Chris- serve all Federal employees in the to patients there Y ts or members of 1 Juneau area. Dan Mahoney of the Dr. Phillip Moore, chief ported by the Chyistian Veterans Administrat'on and V pedic surgeon for the te ats” Social Communists won President of the NFFE may be con- peads the zroup. He will be assis tacted by interested Feceral em- ed by Miss Mildred Snydnam, an- - o o> -~ ployees for informaticn cr applica- esthetist, and Miss Mary Hodgen, tion for membership eratms room supervisor. Al ere PIBLIC LIBRAR * . A ¥ W )L f%e Soderal Oredit ‘Union sormed [rom, the M. Edgecunibe . hospital BATEC: §T R by the Territorial employe 1 - 166”.), SlORY HOU ;he, cendorsement of the eads 0f ¢ o ¢ o w » © w ¢ @ @ ¢he various agenc who were in- terviewed will offer the erv- ices to employees of the T agencies. Mr. Gil Koifel of the Un- same WEATHER REPORT [HER BUREAU) for 24-Hour Pertod itorial Tems employment Compensation Commis- sipn, 18, aoting ps ‘temporary treas- In Juneau— Maximum, 40; ) as usual Fri- :‘;;:’ (“:Idl ’(“‘ ¥ l;; "‘ :“1 A Monm minimum, 33 evening soldstein. Build! . ; o eenine Ak i AL Alrpc Maximum, 38 t g Federal credit unions are cooper- ! RS L ative thrift' and credit organiza- > r ones and one for the tions t provide safe and cony FORECAST older group, will be on hand ent, facilities for regular savings, and d""n; R SHRAPEA e ¥ ‘f‘“r,"elf” k:‘““ ,:Q"“’:“‘:""’;“"1\“;.‘, Variable cloudiness with COL. NOYES REiURNS ’,e”“"".“‘_': “']‘f“‘; i snow flurries and colder to- Col. John R. Noyes, returning! ;,’e':j‘f‘nl‘“(’,‘y:f,]”mn,‘ e - e night and Thursday. Lowest from San Francisco and Portland Bur; O hisc) Oradit Untons temperature near 20 degrees had an unexpected stay on An- g - "> o Thursday Northeasterly ® nette Island, week-end flights being which is a part of the Federal Se- ©e 0093050 0e00c000e0e s . ° . . . . . . ° . . . . . ° . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0N SATURDAY A. M. rary will be ciosed Wednesday, and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA \Graham - §t rand Wedding Saturday Informal (Eeremony | Ellen Cecile Strand, daughter ot Mrs. Laurel McKechnie of Juneau, {and Mr. Ralph Graham, son of Mrs. Alice Graham, of Minneapolis, Min- necota, will be married Saturday | | evening at 7:45 o'clock in an in- |formal ceremony for intimate friends at the home of Mr. and Mrs, | McKechnie. The Rev. Robert 8. Treat will read the weddinz ceremony. | Bridal attendants will be Mrs. | Rozert Davlin and Mrs. Kenneth ;Juugo Attendant to the groom will {be Mr. C. W. Stevenson A reception at the McKechnie home will follow the wedding with |Mrs. C. W. Stevenson, Mrs. Jose- |pbine White and Mrs. Elmer A. | Friend pouring. The bride-to-te was born in Ju- neau and has lived here all her life. | Mr. Graham is a fisherman, They ODD TWI N S_Tiese twins. Roger (left) and Mary Plunkett, | plan to make their home at the 20th were born six days apart at Sydney, Australia. Roger is the older. ‘Ccmury Apartments. Their mother died two days after Mary's birth, - — i s INTERNATIONAL NEWS BREVITIES | i Hideki Tojos lawyer says ‘h ader of war-time Japan—: |ed to die on the gallows--has prom- lised not to commit suicide. Sa ilawyer George Blewett of Philadel- phia: |" “Tojo told me he is ready” for | the execution. Nevertheless, a sharp watch is being kept on the former prime | minister who attempted to shoot | himself shortly after Japan's | render. sur- ‘ President Truman flew back to | Washington Sunday after spending two weeks in Florida on vacation. He made the trip in his big private plane, the Independence. The flight took about four hours. General Dwight Eisenhower’s néw Leck, “Crusade in Europe,” has been distributed in Britain ral British newspapers putli :'sms of the bcok toda: One newspaper, the conservative i Sunc Times, characterizes the &A% : o : o book as a blow at British-American; N EWS COVERAGE_ A Western Sector policeman in [riendship and understanding. An- Berlin stands guard near a news vendor selling the U.S.-licensed - Tondel néwaDabar: the! Bun. Tagesspiegel (Daily Mirror) in an elevated railway station. Guard e st S o' was placed after Soviet-controlled railway police were reported day pictorial, complains that the confiscating Western-licensed newspapers from passengers. The “extravagance of the bouqueis he elevated in Berlin is under control of the Russians. hands to some of the American Is is in strange contrast to the chilly praise with which he so nearly damns Montgomery." The Republicans concede that the Democrats will have top-heavy vot- ing control of at least 10 of the regular standing committees in the next Senate. The Democrats control the Senate 54 to 42 as a result ot | the recent elections. A Gentlemans IM(Z{/fqz - ,fi mzfe/z/zm@/ The new Greek coalition cabinet squeezed through a vote of confi- dence by a two-vote margin Sunday after an all-night debate in parlia- ment, | e o e nresented By % -Windls grounded. He reports a pleasant i o sty 1 i i G PRECIPITATION jcan Airlines as hosts, but was o W . BN 7 ka - g | Canberra that the political strife in Since 1870 N = P s o Under the Federal Credit Union ©® (Fést2!hout s Etey. dita rettien L JEREAC |Asia is a threat to peace every-| | = \' } Act there are credit unions organ- In Juncau 63« AnbiS He was in time to sing in the (oo . "ye id: “We can't expect 4 ‘el lin o State, the Territory of | ® Since Nov. 1, 1984 inches Juneau Men's Chorus at last| g o P S0 e men and women | = & . = Tawail, District of Columbia and i i fac ”fé“‘,'“‘é‘l‘“‘gf&; was one of thie|Pave not enough to eat.” : - f the Canal Zone of Panama. The to- ® At Alrport inche olor oyes was one the | LN / /. / A tal assets of Federal credit unions ® since Nov. 1, 1048 inche speakers at last week's Pacific LT. CALDWELL HERE l ontuc !/ (757 ey" on exceed $250 million, and those under ® since July 1, 4547 inches Noithwest Trade Assoclation con Lt. John Caldwell of Ft. Rich- various State laws bring the total. ® © © © e & ¢ o o o icrence in Portland. ardson, Fairbanks, is at the Bar-| 86 PROOF 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS to over $300 million’ These credit —_——— s (';;&Mx “ERE"*— anof” Hotel. { NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP., NEW YORK unions serve over 3 million people. s 1 e 4 g o e = L S . ' Ao —— Lance S. Barden, who aided in the{ _ASSAU LE-AND! FARERNRY FROM WASHINGTON, D.C. development of the credit union| The U. S. District AUOMEVS vi-| A new stant chief clerk for movement in Hawaii, has been in iice today filed charges in the u. the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation week and S. C missioner’s Court against to dis- John Houts, who is in the city jail J au during the past left for Anchorage Tuesda: office here arrived yesterday. He is William J. Farmer, who comes cuss credit union organiz n with following his arrest v % from Washington, D. C,, where he interested groups in that vicinity. | He was charged by Stan- has spent the past several years Inquiries concerning Federal cred- | ley of the erime of assault and employed in the Reclamation Bur- it unions from any part of Alaska battery November 23—of beating cau Farmer is staying at the should be addressed to Hugh J. her severely about the head and Baranof Hotel. Wade, Territorial Director of the face. - > Federal Security Agency in Juneau.| The case was to come before | MRS. GREENWALD HERE ——————— Commissioner Felix Gray this af-| Mrs. Albert Greenwald of Hoo- RESULTS! Inah is at the Baranof Hotel. WANT ADS BRING ternoon. SPECIAL Thanksgiving Bay DINNER . Soup Chicken Broth with Rice Entrees G Roast Young Tom Turkey — Savory Dressing Cranberry Sauce — Giblet Gravy Virginia Baked Ham - ruit Sauce — Candied Sweet Potato Filet Mignon — Butterfly Cut — Bacon Strip — French Fried Potatoes Roast Leg of Fresh Pork — Sage Dressing — Rolled Roast Sirloin of Beef - Home Made Butterflake Rolls calloped Corn Olives N Celery Pumpkin Pie or Ice Cream ROYAHL CA — Apple Sauce Brown Gravy Snowflake Potatoes lince Pie FE 162 Scuth Frankiin Street — Juneau THANKSGIVENG MERU | : 4 J: CRISP CELERY HEARTS RIPE OLIVES +* | COCKTAIL: FRESH ALASKA SHRIMP MIXED FRUIT CUP SOUP: CREAM OF CHICKEN SUPREyE CONSOMME ROYAL i ENTREE—CHOICE OF: . | ROAST TOM TURKEY—Walnut Dressing—Fresh Cranberry Sauce BAKED SUGAR-CURED HAM—Pineapple Sauce—Candied Yams | PAN FRIED SPRING CHICKEN—Southern Style | PRIME RIBS OF BEEF—Yurk:hire—Onion\ VEGETABLES POTATOES—Dutchess ? + WALDORF SALAD * BUTTERED PEAS PUMPKIN PIE HOT MINCE PIE PLUM PUDDING—Brandy Sauce ASSORTED ICE CREAM g The BARANOF HOTEL Il H WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 24,1948 | participated in the planning led by Maj. Arthur D. Rhodes, assist- | ant Deputy Chief of Staff at | the Washington, D. C. headquart- [EMERGENCY RADI NETWORK PLANNED | PORTLAND, Nov. emergency radio network cperated by spanning the aska and Hawali, to TForce aides. g | ers of CAP. OPERATED BY CAP lnumber one assignment given | CAP by the Air Force," SIS ROAST TOM TURKEY with Dress- $3 00 ing and Giblet Gravy BAKED SUGAR CURED Candied Sweet Potatoes PAN FRIED LOCAL CHICKEN with Country Gravy FRIED RABBIT, Southern Style Mashed Potatoes HAM with $2.50 $2.50 Buttered New Peas | Salad Hot Biscuits and Honey, Tea or Coffee Included Serving Starts 4:00 P. M. i PHONE RESERVATION EARLY Call Juneau 015 or 399 ENTERTAINMENT FEATURE KEN FAGEN-Magician % PRINCIPLE No. 6. To combat AMERICA, composed as it is of all nationalitics, races, creeds, as well as all economic classes, has long been -called the great melting pot of civil- ization. In our efforts 1o help cariy out this great experiment in human evolution we must assure all groups that we stand for reason and fairness in all human activities. Individual initiative must not be stifled by any revolution of the hu- man drones; neither can we afford to allow powerful overbearing spe- cial privilege groups to autocrati- cally exploit the inarticulate masses. Our Nation is large enough and rich enough so that-all can live happily and well. If we permit autocratic control of one part of our people by Every stratum of American citizenship is represented in The American Legion. It will always be a broad and comprebensive segment of American society, wherein the autocrat has no hope of gaining a foothold. PERFORMER EXTRACRDINARY Spectacular Demonstrations Every Night at the | Salmon Creek Country Club “This communications net is the the { Maj. 24‘__1‘L_An;Rhodes reported. “It would be bef‘ vital factor in providing communi- Civil Air Patrol un“s;cauox_'xs in case of emergency, civil nation and in Al-| or military, which might knock out was discussed | OF overload existing commercial or {nere over the weekend with Air | Military circuits” He said the CAP nas over 5,000 Representatives from the Pacific | radio stations, most of them on Northwest and the two territories | yidependent power, $3.00 the autocracy - of both the classes and the masses another groyp we thereby nullify all of our democratic principles of fair- ness, freedom, and justice, * Let us remember that we repre- sent a-great cross-section of our na- tional life. Whenever we have the opportunity we must insist that dif- ferences between groups be settled - peacefully, reasonably, and with fair- ness 'to the general public as well as to both contesting parties. We must doall we can tokeepalive “The American Drcam,” the faith and confidence in the worthwhiles ness of the common man; the hope | of opportunity, and freedom for the complete, balanced growth and de- | velopment of each individual accord- ing 1o his vision, abilitics, and eflors, ’ 3