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PAGE SIX THE DAILY ALASKA EM President of Uni fed Stafes Will Appear on “One Great Next Saturday ning, 26, between 10 and 11 o'clock (EST) | nery superintendent. (7 to 8 p. m. Juneau time), there will be broadcast one of the great- est single programs in the history | of radio. Called “One Great Huur"lan”m by steamer from the States. it will be heard over every one of [She will visit her daughter, Mrs, VISITING HERE 'AGREEMENT REACHED ON ' INCOME TAX (continued from page one’ March [peen offered the position ,of can- | | the amendment was adopted. An |amendment by Senator McCutcheon |'to cut the appropriation to $250,000 Mrs. A. R. Van Lew was a recent | was defeated. The Senate did not suspend the rules to take final action on the bill. GUARD BILL WINS HOUSE ~ YOTE, 20-4 | (Continued trom Puge Cne) to whirl about the National Guard | bill. : Mrs. Doris Barnes asked before | voting for it: | “Does my vote affect my right to contest its legality?” She said later she did not plan to make any test of it but others PIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA DOCTORS COMPLETE MUMPS RESEARCH; RETURN STATESIDE Following completion of ‘a pro-| zram of mumps vaccination re- scarch in Southeast Alaska, Drs. Jane and Carroll Burgodn are in juneau today, preparing to leave the States. The medical couple will return to Philadelphia, where they are both working as resident fellows at the University of Pennsylvania. The mumps vaccination has been carried on through the joint co- operation of thé Arctic Institute, the Alaska Department of Health 1 ALASKA COASTAL ‘CARRIES 25 ON FLIGHTS TUESDAY Passengers , brought by Alaska Coastal Airiines yester- day numbereq 13 and those going out numbered 12 for a total of 25 as follows: To Sitka: Ken Logan. Dan Mor- gan, Joseph Johnson, Mr. and Mr Harold Hamgard, Helen Amos To Pelican: Mr. and Mrs. John Krugness, Virgil Wickel. To Gustavus: Frank Melang. To Skagway: Ken Bowman. To Haines: Leo R. Albecker. | (y Juneau ACS PLANS EXTENSIONS IN ALASKA (Continued from Page One) | was $6,199,000 last tiscal year, as against expenses cf $5,743,280. “The Alaska Communications Sys- | tem” General Aiken said, “must | not allow its interests in meetin military requirements to cause it to fail in its primary function of { The Coast Guard patrol ship Stor- is returned yestérday aftérnoon fre a service run to light stations. Ray Egan, ENC and James Cahal, DC3 were transferred Sunday to Seattle. Cahal was transferred for assign- ment to duty pending discharge and Egan for hospitalization in the Se- attle Marine Hospital. Wallis S. Windley, DC1, has been ordered from Seattle to duty aboard the Storis. Orders have heen received advanc- ing the following men as of March the 1092 stations of the four major ;i josten, whe recently arrived here srks, CBS, NBC, ABC, Mutual, | from Cobol. Mrs. Van Lew is from | eds of non-network *‘“'JLm\'lon. Okla. . | The House-approved bill to tax 16: Geo. W. Mackey, EN2 to ENI, jand Gerald Backus, FN (EN) to EN3. and the Alaska Native Service, with Dr. Jane Borgoon, mumps re- serving the development of the Territory of Alaska.” Punchboard Tax migit. She did give notice of reconsid- From Skagway: Franklin Calkins. s hund From Pelican: Richard Kendall, | noth- Great Hour” will be spon- the widest cooperation ot has ever “One sored by inter-church groups that been achieved among Christian churches up to the present time. 1t will be designed specifically to more than $10,000,000 for Relief in the churches shout America on Sunday, March 27, the Sunday immediately following the program. G The Saturday night broadcast will be climaxed by the personal appear- ance of President Truman to make his personal appcal for American Christiafis participate in this reat endeavor. Basic structure of Us greai pro- | gram will be dramatized true-lie examples of the many vitally im- pes of work now being ne gh Churches and Church anizations in Europe and Asia. am will feature 1 drama, and ive to an aud- of some 50,000,000 listeners a ar idea of just why contributions essary right now. It will| America, and to all the; st how great is the power | our Churches work mmon | d wi a to cn! yol To he: thr eri ames, great sor s Who wiil pia; ‘One Great Hour” Ida Lupino and . They will be |t orted by many d famous overseas ior Class Could You!” will be held this week. The play will be staged | school gymnasium Friday night, R® - March 25. The evening performance | manity, Senator Collins announ- |y sucpension of the rules on a two- Marilyn Isa Terry Snethe: great | sporting teen Service. SENIOR PLAY | punchboards was passed by the Senate 11-3 after the rate had been The final rehearsals for the Sen- |increased to $2 each on boards of Play, “Professor, in 11 begin at 8 o'clock. the | refunded to municipalities. How | 2,000 holes or less, $4 each on larg- er boards, with all revenues to be | “Punchboards are a curse to hu- ced. “If the tax were $10 to $20 |eration of her vote, however, but | Speaker McCutcheon ruled that un- ‘der the rules of the Legislature there could be no reconsideration to- ay or Thursday—the two final days. That meant the reconsidera- | tion was possible only last night, a thirds vote. There obviously was no The characters are Keats Perry,[I would favor it. He voted against | snance of mustering the two-thirds. young professor, Lyle Riley; Vic- ky Randolph, the bane of his life, |his vote before the result was an- Shirley Edwards; Grandma Perry, | ounced. an obliging soul | Grandpa Perry, an innocent by- these bills that I said ‘no’ auto- | Rep. Amelia Gundersen. Critics of | stander, Jim Pinkerton; John Ap-| matically,” he explained. pleby, a helpful friend, Jim Stev-‘ Phyllls Andrews; s; Priscilla ung thing, otsie Bean, Morley, a sweet Edith Wellington a plump spinster, T big br e Whit her, Larry Pusich; Val- 1en, 4 southern charmer, and Boggins, the yutler, Raymond Robert- N - FOREST SERVICE STARTS WORK FOR HOMESITE AREAS in taken by the U. S. Forest passage of the bill, then changed | | | ‘m so used to voting againsi The Senate aiso passed Senaior | Dawes' SJM 9, which has been in a | 'pxgeonhole since early in the ses-. |sien. It urges the National Labor | ak; Butcher Boy Bean,|Relations Board to re-examine and | Attorney General Ralph Rivers the | | revise its policies regarding Alaska | |cases coming before it so as to speed up their cettiemenr. ] YESTERDAY AFTERNOON | The second income tax bill, a re-‘ | viseq version of the one that be-| came law in January of this year, passed the Senate on a 12-2 vote yesterday afternoon. There was no |debate when the bill, to which one {emendment had been added by the | Senate, came up for final passage. Two Democratic Senators, Lyng and Rivers, were absent at the moment | the vote was taken. Two Republican | The very first step in a homesite Senators, Jones and Munz, voted |y subdivision of great importance he future of Southeast Alaska has against it. Two new measures, a memorial and a resolution, were introduced end passed during the afternoon The procedural dispute arose over the ill coming Lack tc the House as a Senate committee substitute for the bill criginally introduced by| e msasure insisted it was a new 1l. Its supporters, including the peaker, held it held the status of | an amended House bill. However, after consultation with| 11 went through a full second read- | ing—the procedure for a new bill.| SALARY CONTROVERSY A controversy cver how much ter- | ritorial officials should be paid| highlighted the night session. | Most of the salaries in the Senate kil were bkoosted from $6,600 to 37,500 or $8,000. Some of the legis-| lators, led by Attorney Warren Tay- | lar, argued at length to get the| | Attorney General and the Commls-‘ oner of Education raised to $10,000. The attempts failed. It failed for the attorney general| by only the slimmest possible mar- | gin, a 12-12 vote. Then an amend- ment was adopted raising the At-| torney General to $9,000. | But attempts to raise the Commis- | scarch specialist, and her husband,. Dr. Carroll, doing the work in the field. With determination of the dura- tion of immunization as the main objective in the research program, plans are to follow the present work with yearly blood checks on all persons vaccinated by the Bur- 300ns. The two doctors return to the States aiter more than three months of research work in Alaska. R HAIR SEAL, WOLF, (OYOTE BOUNTIES PAYABLE JUNE 1| Requests for payment of bounty on wolves and hair seal, in line with legislation enacted this month, are being made because of a mis- understanding of the provisions, ac- coring to Oscar G. Olson, Treasurer of Alaska. His office is being swamped with such requests. It is necessary to turn them down, for the time be- inz, because the measures do not become effective for 90 days after passage. “This works a hardship on the ‘middle man’,” said-Treasurer Olson teday. “The trader, thinking the rayments began immediately, pays $50 on welves, $30 on coyotes or $6 on hair seal. But we are not able tc act until June 1 and 2 in the case of hair seal, wolf and coyote, Ann Creseman, Mrs. Alice Kendall. From Gustavus: Joseph M. Glea- son. From Wrangell: Col. O. F. Ohlson. From Angoon: Dr. and Mrs. C F. Burgoon. From $itka: Don Lillie, John Oc- tuck, Joyce Everest, George Everest. From Hoonah: Mrs. John Smith. SPECIAL MUSIC AT SALMON (REEK FOR TREAT AT WEEKEND The five-piece Petersburg orches- tra has been secured for playing at the S8almon Creek Country Club Fri- day night starting at 9 o'clock. The orchestra is coming to play for the annual fishermen’s dance Saturday night and when that en- gagement is ended the bandsmen will go to the country club for early Sunday dancing. Baby—Shower Tues. Eve. Dalziel Home A baby shower was given last eve- ning for Mrs. Dick Dalziel by Mrs. Arthur Burke and Mrs. Eldon Spence at the Dalziel home on Behr- ends Avenue. The Dalziel baby was | He said there ‘almost ling" in the way of commercial | communications systems in Alaska except the local telephone system at Juneau and some 300 locally |owned radio telephone and tele- graph stations with which the Alaska Communications System co- sperates. | Vi I MID-WEEK LENTEN - SERVICE THURSDAY, LUTHERAN CHURCH Meeting on Thursday evening from 17:45 to 8:30 c'clock the mi week Lenten Devotional Service will be continued with the fourth of a series of studies on Luther’s Small | Catechism. | The services of the Lutheran | Church are always open to the pub- dc and everyone is cordially wel- {come to attend. This week’s su:ject will be Basic Truths akout God as expressed in the Apostle’s Greed. The meditation will be pointed to the question, “Does God ZTerve Man, or Does Man Serve God.” WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calomel—Aad You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go ‘The liver should pour out about 2 pints of bile juice int~ your bowels every day. If this I P e CON i iy SCHWINN BICYCLES at MA.> SEN’S. 46 9 Minute Man EVERY MINUTE of every day, somebody’s home goes up in flames . . . every hour a life is lost to Fire’s insatiable appetite. Help end this terrible toll of lives and prop- erty! % Clean out your Fire hazards teday . . . and, for insurance protection, call Shattuek session®of the Senate. ‘The memorial, inspired by a pe- tition from 27 residents of Seldovia, protests the reopening of Kachemak Bay, Cook Inlet, to herring fish- born February 26 and was named Rotert Malcolm. Guests at the shower were Mes- dames W. C. Jensen, Arthur Wal- ther, John Hermle, Fred Turpin, 15 ot flowirz froely, your lood may not digest. It may* ‘ust decay in the bowels. Then gas bioats up your stomach. You get con- stipated. Yc sour, sunk and the world Iooks punk. It takes those mild, gentle Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of bile flow- sioner of Education to the sa tigure and the Commissicner of La- | tor from $7,500 to $8,000 failed. Riled at failure to get $10,000 for Three men have just gone to Kei- jchikan to run surveys of additional roads needed for opening homesites a Protes-igor employees of proposed pulp respectively.” Unlike those measures, there is |an emergency clause in legislation ‘pmviding for $2 bounty on eagles act as Agency Seward Street Century among other | miys editorial form: “Nothing | pened betore! 2 se here at last that is big enough-and ugh to unite Ro- and Protestant Christ- banner of compas- Eugene A. Loftis of the olic Welfare Confer- ence says that this collaboration should ‘make a profound impres- sion on the people of Europe.’ We | agree, and add that it should be) equally impressive here. When this can happen, then the gospel of the merciful Christ proves that it is the hope of the world because it can still move the people who claim it as their own to an imaginative and unprecedented deed of Christ- ian love.” DOUGLAS NEWS CANNERY STOCKHOLDERS At a stockholders meeting held Monday evening in the Juneau City Hall, stockholders in the Douglas Canning Co., Inc, a com- munity enterprise, elected Felix Toner and Arne Shudshift to the beard of directors, increasing the board from five to seven members. Both new members are well known on the channel. Several other changes were voted to be made in the Articles ot Cor- poration. Following the stockholders meet- ing, the Board of Directors elected the following officers: Marcus Jen- sen, president; E. E. Engstrom, vice president and Val A. Poor, secretary and treasurer. Other members on the board, besides the newly elected Toner and Shudshift are: Bert Mc- Dowell and Dr. J. O. Rude. James V. Cole, prominent local man, has HAVE EXPLOR YOU AN FOREHEAD ? ' HIGH, SHARPLY CURVED - P These portions of National Forest and will be covered with topogra- hic surveys tc permit the most ad- vantageous breakup into small ot with the intention that settlers be able to secure title to the ground at the earliest possicle mo- ment, according to Charles G. Bur- dick, Assistant Regional Forester. “These areas,” said Burdick, “are planned as suburban developments, rather than rural ones. Right from the start, plans for the subdivision | will include provisions for such es- sentials to community living as water and sewer mains and tele-| phone and power lines. “The areas are about ten miles| irom Ketchikan, and in proxumly‘ to the pulp mill sites.” In the party making a three- week survey for preliminary data are these Forest Service experts: Harold | Anderson, engineer; John Brillhart, | forester in land-use planning, and Ed Zigler, cartographic engineer. PNA TUESDAY FLIGHTS TAKE 7 PASSENGERS Pacific Northern Airlines flights carried seven passengers in and out of Juneau yesterday as follows: From Gustavus: R. E. Kruger. To Cordova: H. R. Forehand, Pet- er Tanstad. To Anchorage: Marjory Kater, Joe Nashaolock, J. B. Beaher, Mrs. Ear] Bassford. ing, except for bait and food pur-|fered an poses. It was introduced by Senator | Engebreth and the names of Sena-|alsy failed. The :ill provides the| tors Huntley, McCutcheon and Riv-|Board of Health can pay as much as | ers, all from the Third Division, were added as co-authors before it | was passed. COMMENDS U. OF W. Senate Resolution 2, by Senator |Munz, resolving “that the Senate| ccmmends the Board of Regents and | the President of the University of | Washington for their courageous and decisive action in ridding the university faculty of teachers hav- ing memtership in the Communist Party,” was introduced and quickly passed. Senator Victor C. Rivers was the lone dissenter. “This is the most ridiculous thing ever to come before this body,” Senator Rivers asserted. “We have no facts to base it upon. We don’t know whether the regents were courageous or merely damn fools.” “The general principle is good and that's what counts,” Senator | Collins retorted. Senator Munz pointed out th:at virtually the same resolution was recently passed by the California Legislature. Senator Rivers cast the only vote against the measure. The senators voted to ask the House to reconsider its action in tabling of &.B. 72, to appropriate $7,500 for the completion of the Prospector Memorial Statue, de- spite a comment by Senator Rivers that “perhaps tihe House thought it Little Tots, FURROWS REVEAL LOVE FOR NEW EXPERIENCES. OWNER' WILL RAISE AN APPRECIATIVE EYEBROW OVER A *DOUBLE-RICH* ¥ CREAM OF KENTUCKY MANHATTAN ¢ 'ine Blended Whiskey, 86 Proof, J0% grain neutral spirits. © 1948, - nley Dist, Corp,, N. Y. EX-281 | Castee . suggests New Clothing for the 00 . For The Easter Parade Make Y our Selection LT ut ELCET INFANT AND P. O. Box 761 | CHILDREN'S WEAR [ EEN Tho the Attorney General, Taylor of-| amendment to cut the\' | Health Commissioner to $8,000. It/ $12,000 to the commissioner. It was explained in the debate that he now 3ets $10,000. | | MEMORIALS PASSED | The House passed unanimously two memorials for Alaska hydro- | electric development and for state- side rates on the Alaska Railroad| and continued use and rehabilita- tion of the Seward-Portage section of the line. Both memorials were by Keating. The former one asks Con- gress and the Interior Departmant to consider appropriating $1,250,000 for the next fiscal year for continued study of Alaska power sites. better to buy weans than bronze.” The statue, when completed, will stand in front of the Pioneers’ Home at Sitka. NOW YOU CAN VISIT SCANDINAVIA THIS YEAR! © At your regquest, this summer SAS will cffer more than twice as many flights to Scandi- navia. NINE round-trips every week, beginning May 16. ® Think' wkat that means! You can practically name your de- parture day . . . be sure of ccnvenient connections going and coming . . . spend more time in the homeland—scant hours in travel—less time away from home and job. ©THE ONLY DC-6 planes— just 17 hours New York to Scandinavia. Direct connec- tiions to all Europe. ® FREE MEALS, smorgasbord and refreshments aloft. ®NO TAX . «. no tipping . . . no charge for baggage up to 66 pounds. See Your Travel Agent or NORTHWEST AIRLINES which is effective now. —————— Lauson 4-Cycle Air-cooled OQut- Boards. New models. Madsen’s. 41 tf i “Woody” Reynolds, W. J. Walker, Louise Yakopatz, Thelma Retallick, and Miss Ruby Breitkreutz. ing freely to make you feel “up and up.” Get today. Effective in making ly. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver any drugstore. Juneau Phone 249 Westward Hotel, Anchorage Main 765 CANOINAVIAY AIRLINES SVSTIM 824 While Bldg., Seattle SEenca 6250 New York: 47 E. 46th St., Circle 6-4000 Chicago: 37 Wabash Ave, RAndolph 6-6984 Minneapolis: 1110 Rand Tower, Lincoln 4735, NEstor 6911 Los Angeles: 108 W. 6th st ‘TUecker 3739 Yvonne’s DRESSES UMBRELLAS GERMAINE MONTEIL COSMETICS SUITS COATS 14 OFF Vanity Fair Slips FASTE R 1-3 OFF Waool Sweaters