The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 22, 1949, Page 8

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I’AGE EIGHT THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR JUNEAU, ALASKA ling “La Rougette” by Bennette, ac- JUNEAU CITY BAND, MEN'S CHORUS, GIVE CONCERT 8 IONIGHI amental pro- calib: 10 nt ) h (‘, A choral .i'xd inst gram of proportions evening at be pre Tw at 8 1 be offered musical vari the ntury s€ a y of musical fare tc pled concert’ our Sic the pres tion of music that the audi enjoy,” Diréctor Josepl stated. “We feel th tains such variety tions t ence will 1 It has been \I”' policy of neau City Band to present, concert, at \e- number very serious or cl November Rubenstein Ostrow” was performed; concert previous to thay the to er the Ju at each of Last | oi | and in a| band | least mmp-mw(l by the band. Lovers of good choral music are in [nr a treat when Ernest Ehler's en’s Chorus sing several negro spirituals and the haunting melody »f Bchubert’s “Serenade.” This concert is sponsored by the Juneau Rotary Club. The concert committee consists of Dr. C. E. Al- brecht,” chairman; Arthur Uggen; Neil Fritchman, and Ralph Mize. The box office of the 20th Cen- tury theatre will open at the usual |time, 7 o'clock tonight and the con- cert will begin at 8 o'clock. gt T TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS REPORTED INCREASING; POLICE GIVE WARNING Now that the streets and traffic lanes wider, Police officets report a great crease in traffic violations. Speeding, operating a vehicle without a muffler and failure to | stop at stop signs are frequent offenses. are clear Juneau n- the most | ROTARIANS WIND UP 'ARRANGEMENTS FOR (ITY BAND CONCERT) band | r 1ght at 8 ok a good share on meeting for lining 1 arrangements and giviny it where credit was due | {in the big job of putting on:the evening's concert. Carl Heinmiller, manager, was Sp [giving a brief resume of the r:u., pioneering venture A"mn Heinmiller told Rotarians that he Haines route to the Interior an be a boom for this area it op- ned on a year-round b; | tourist trade and position as gate- to the Interior are Chilkoot's wo biggest advantages, Hemmuyler ud Dr. C. Earl Albrecat, chairman ol e hand concert committee, re- orted on the committee’s work, Port Chilkoot r of the d vet nea 5. The | court by Sammy Quijada seeking |6 EMBARK ON DENALI BOUND WESTWARD Sailing last night at 8:30, the| Denali had two passengers embark- ing for Skagway and four for Sitka For Skagway, passengers were: Mrs. Bernice Morgan, Thomas Evan- son. For Sitka: Peter A. Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hanford, Mrs. B. Johnson. e, STEAMER MOVEMENTS Baranof from Seattle scheduled to | arrive 4 p. m. today. Princess Norah from Vancmum scheduled to arrive Thursday atter- evening g DIVORCE APPLICATION be suit has been filed in District St | noon or A bu divorce from Rita Quijada, whom he married in Seattle In 1948. He states the defendant was convict- ed of the crime of grand larceny and is in the federal jail await- ing transportation to a federal pen- eig TONY STEEL FINED $100 IN OLD CASE A case of long standing has been eel. It had been pending ht years. Through Attorney Henry Rod SEATTLE EDITOR ON | settled in the District Court—that nl the United States versus Tony for en, Steel pleaded guilty, and was fined $50 on each of two counts of illegal fishing. TRIP TO SE ALASKA DeWitt Gilbert, editor of Pac! rt will leave here Wrangell, Irg, RSP LR IFAWA PRESIDENT 1fic Fisherman’s News, on a pre-fishing- season visit to Southeast Alaska is stopping n Juneau for a week. Gil- at the end of the week to stop at Sitka, Peters- Ketchikan and Prince Rupert before returning Seattle. to RETURNS TO SEATTLE fourth in a series of Lenten Fel- TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1949 FURNESS TO WASHINGTON LENTEN SERVICES Communion at 10 o’clock. AT HOLY TRINITY Midweek Lenten services at Holy |cussion will be “Power fcr Living,row f Trinity tomorrow will begin at 7from Worship.” at W RAhston, o'clock with Holy Communion fol- lowed by special devotions and Holy lowship hours will begin with a cov- e ered dish supper and followed with| Milton J. Furness, admmistrative devotions and discussion on the| officer of the U. S. Fish and Wild- Prayer Book. The subject for dis-|1life Service, plans to leave tomor- There he will confer on busi- ness management problems at the annual conference of F.W.S. ad- ministrative officers. He expects to —————eo——— H Lauson 4-Cycle Air-cooled Out- In the evening at 6:30 o'clock the | Boards. New modeis. Mulun& 41 tf' return April 15, For Rent Immediate Occupancy. .. 65 feet-long, 10 feet wide Two Story with Elevator Rent $100 per Month In George Brothers Building Also . .. 50-foot wide front, 84 feet deep Will rent all or half For Information See Joe George GEORGE BROTHERS LIQUOR STORE Also . itentiary to serve a three-year term. - MARRIAGE LICENSE Muriel E. Lytle and John L. Tow- iney, both of Whitehorse, Y. T., yes- terday applied at the U. 8. Com- missioner’s office for a marrlage | license. played “The First Move Schubert’s Unfinished Tonight the rand will Sibelius' symphonic “Finlandia” to Juneau's minded music public. In reference to following note is quoted f gram of the Russian Society. “Fu‘lmmm the Joe Jurich, president of Interna- tional Fishermen and Allled Work- ers’ Association (IFAWA), left to- day by plane for Seattle after a four-day stay in Juneau where he took part in a conference of CIO fisheries union leaders over the weekend. Motorists are reminded that | speed limits are 12 miles per hour "Uin school | hours; 15 miles in the serious- | tion, and 20 miles in outlying | tricts. the| A maximum m a pro- |legal on out-of-town hig ymphonic — e hanki his committeemen, who, school | he , gave unstintingly of their | iime and effort to put the concert over zones ing business dis- ctarians working on the concert de: tickets and program—Art Ralph Mize, Robert Aker- ‘Al Zenge publicity—Neil Fritchman, Char W. Carter, C. A. Lawrence, Ellis Reynolds; uni- .orms—Elmer Friend, Art Uggen, joe Shofn aging—Manuel Pare- , Lee L S, Dr. Albrecht gave acknowledge- ment to the Empire and the Press mid to KINY for publicity, to Jack ilever for sign painting, to the adio station for loan of their piano wnd Lo George Brotiers and the City for lumber for adding to the tage, and to the Juneau Men's rorus for appearing as an added tion to the band concert pro- | 0w o 0 00 Khml\z’l ex- seems to ion of ll,: national and life. Tl" werk records the pression of an exile’s, return kome after a ce. An agitated, the brass cho)r. short and tr t, begins the Introducticn. This theme is an- swered by an organ-like in the wood-wind, and the witiout WEATHER REPORT 5. §. WEATHER BUREAU This data is for 24-hour pe- ricd endir 6:30 am. PST. In Jun Maximum, 40; minimum, At Airport minimum, 3: # kit FORECAST ApEnye | au und Vielnits) erful passage . . . A second subject Cloudy with occastonal light introduced the wecod-wind and rains tonight and = Wednes- taken up by the strings . . . is peace- day. Towsst: tonight 36 .de- ful and elevated in character, and grees and highest Wednesday' might be looked upon as prophetic near 40 degrees. Southeast of ultimate rest and happiness . . . winds, occasionally as high The development of these musical e il per Hour) ideas carries the tone poem to an PRECIPITATION eloquent conclusion.” 3 ® (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. todny Though it does not intend to “play | ¢ Jn Juneau 28 inches; down" to its audience, to those not | ¢ gince March 1, 2.73 inches; too much inclined toward the sym- since July 1, 94.73 inches. phonic, the band offers Harold At Airport 06 inches; Walter's up to the minute rhythms since Malrcn 1, 1.06 inches; KENTUCKY WHISKEY—A BLEND in “Badinage for Brasses.” Cole Por since July 1, 59.36 inches. an pilot and J. Kirk Jones of ~°'l NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP., NEW YORK < 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS ter, America’s most suc ful song e e 0 00 o 0 o o e o attle. writer, will be heard also. And for| — - P S — those who expert the band to play % some military music, Sou stirr- ing and irresistible “Stars and Stripes Forever,” is presented For those who are partl ano music s Dol A ano soloist, will present Maximum, 39 (un . . . . ° 0 ° . . . . ° . dent Charlie Carter appoint- lliam Hughes, Henry Hogue, Ryan and George Schmidt April program committee. 'E. B. Collins, visiting Ro- arian from Fairbanks, who has at- ended meetings here during the 2isl , told the Juneau s o1 m.- meet- 2400 square feet, two-story building on waterfront. Building on concrete foundatien. $150.00 per month. Enjoy the whlskey thuts C‘umfiu!b s its Nawme” eececccccose to pi- Any way it strikes your eye, this long, low Thar's wiar ownegs say 2949 MERURY is bound to strike your fancy! From massive, gleaming grille to ABOUT THIS HANDSOME sweeping trunk, it's a honey! Yes, a honey! new 1949 MERWURY ! Ouners say it has the sweetest-looking lines of any car today. And it has! A B! © It's 20 easy to use, and it pro- tects as well as beautifies all fur- niture and woodwork. Made by the makers of famous Simoniz for cars—}ousehold Simoniz comes in four colors to match all woods. It doesn’s cost much. Get some R et 55 - SIMONIZ Feather-weight mild boning prevents rolling. Side panels are fashioned scientifically to comply to the contour of the figure. Smooth seams reinforced with nylon. Finest satin latex pcnoh that are tailored to slenderize the silhovette. Vassarette fashioned sides assure retention — within easy reach and invisibility under the sleskest dress. by fast v 4-engine Clipper Y(.)U'Ll get the finest of styling—and everything else—in your 1949 Mercury. For it's one 1949 car that’s already been road-proven for millions of miles. And here’s what your new, road-hugging “Free-action” bottom band relieves strain on the garment and protects sheer hosiery fops. Full _retention ithat gracefully and gently molds:the figure to the Mercury gives you: A new 110-horsepower desired smooth lines. of fashion. 4 Fly in swift comfort aboard the big, 4-mile-a- minute Clippers . . . serving Alasks on frequent 8¢ hedules. Enroute, settle back in your comfortable Jounge seat and enjoy @ wml-li famous service 88 part o your Flying Clipper fare. For reservation and rotes, consult Pan American -« BAPRANOF HOTEL Phone 106 Pav AHERICAN | iorLo AI!IMYS Ciimpers 8-cylinder, V-type engine with surprising i cconomy! Front coil springing! A truly e 4 restful “comfort-zone” ride! Easier steering! brakes! - Softer, _broader VASSARETTE STYLE NO. P85 seating! Increased all-round visibility, tool See it—and you'll say: “It’s Mercury mel” Make, youn next: ean, the, proven, 1949 MERCURY JUNEAU MOTOR COMPANY Juneau, Alaska *“Super-safety” for me! See your wexrcar ar= 7

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