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i IVEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1949 IIIIIIlIHHIIIIIHIIIHIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIllllIIIIIIN. Miss Raduich, 48 . W.S. Dapcevich fo Wed on Saturday| Miss Helen Radunovich of Bil- Ings, Mont., and Mr. William S. Dapcevich will be married Satur- day evening at 8 o'clock at the Holy Trinity Episcopal Church! with the Rev. Samuel McPhetres| ieading the couble ring ceremony. Miss Radunovich, who has been on the staff ot the Federal Hous- | {iny Authority in Seattle for the) past three years, arrived here from the south Sunday with her mother. Mrs. S. P. Radunovich and her; sister, Miss Stella Radunovich who is to be her maid of honor. The groom to be is the son of! TODAY! There’s REAL | EXCITEMENT in this | thrilling picture — actual- ly filmed inside bomb- ravaged Berlin? 'THE MOST STARTLING aND [ TIMELY STORY EVER FILMED! [str. and Mrs. Sam Dapeevich, ong- | s 3 " 3 . 3 time residents in Juneau, and is |on the Alaska Native Service staff. j Mr. John Dapcevich, brother of j the groom, will be best man, with Mr. Walter Rounsley and Mr. Mar- lin Feero as ushers. Mr. Rollin L.| [ Emel will give the bride in mnr-l | riage. | An open invitation reception at the Salmon Creek Country Clubl will follow the ceremo ! INTRIGUE IN THE WORLD’S GREATEST DANGER SPOTE OBERON Robert RYAN Charles KORVIN Paul Nuptials Announced Mr. end Mrs. R. W. Loudon of Bakersfield, California, announce the forthcoming (daughter, Betty, | Daugherty, III, Saturday morning at 10 o'clock in the Shrine of Saint Terese. Rev. Leo H. Sweeney wil: perform the ceremony. Bridesmaid will be Miss Martha Nicely, ot Bakersfield, Calif,, and best man will be Mr. Robert Keller of Juneau. A reception in the Lodge The bride’s parents have been en- tertained at a series of dinners marriage of their }0[ Saint Teresa will follow the mar- riage. | Miss Louden is employed in the | Territorial Health Department while | and parties since their arrival last to Mr. John i Mr. Daugherty is on the staff of the B. M. Behrends Bank. week. On Monday they were taken to Taku Inlet on a charter boat cruise. Guests who are attending the § wedding and going by bus are| requested to be at the bus depot by 8:30 o'clock Sunday morning Those in need of transportation to he Shrine may call the Rev. Sweeney at the Church of the Na- tivity. 182 ---EXTRA!--- |\ ROBERTCOOTE V _“Radio Romeo” | ROMAN TOPOROW “Lights of Broadway” { pgrgR VON ZERNECK | @lfifiififilfifififillffl’lfifilfuflmnuum VETERANS' BONUS LAW, WASHINGTON 'Soper-Mackey Vows . Spoken on Monday :23—9:30 Feature at 8:00—10:08 llllvlblIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllIllIIlIIIIIIIIII On Monday evening Miss Mar- garet Soper and C. W. (Bill) Mac- key were married by the Rev. W. A. Sokoleff at the pastor’s home. Witnesses were Miss Margaret | Burgh and Wallace Southworth. The bride, who is employed with the Unemployment Compensation | Commission, is the daughter ot |Mr. and Mrs. Nell Soper of Marys- | ville, Wash. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Mackey of | Puyallup, Wash., and is aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Storis, 36 ABOARD PNA'S constitutional because: (1) the $80,- 000,600 bond issue by which it is to be financed exceeds the $400,000 | constitutional debt limit; (2) that ‘lhe bond issue had not been sub- | mitted to the voters to provide ex- | empticn from the constitutional | limitation, and (3) that its title was even more misleading than STATE, IS ILLEGAL that of the old initiative measure. Dedared UI'I(OHSMU"OM'\ Challenge to the constitutional- by Judge-Headed for c;.i.." "cricn, Seacic tommcco Supreme Court | | dealer, at the request of persons in- | terested in testing the validity of |the law. The challenge held the OLYMPIA, Wash., June 1.—#— |taxes provided in the law were dis- . Held unconstitutfonal by a Thurs-|¢Timinatory and confiscatory| Ppacific Northern Airlines carried ton County Superior Court Judge,|28ainst cne class or retailers. The |3 passengers on Tuesday flights the $80,000,000 state veterans’ bonus |1aw provided that the bonds be re- | 35 follows: law headed today for a Supreme tired by two 10 per cent taXes on| From Yakutat: Robert Apacotos, Court, test June 16. | cigarettes—the existing one and a|c. N. Jakanovich, C. W. Broome. Superior Judge John M. Wilson |Rew one to be levied when the law | 7o yakutat: Harold Heaton. ruled in a memo opinion yester- | Went into effect. The challenge also| To Cordova: Donald Bourgeouis, day that the new Jaw failed toCited violation of the debt limita- | william Wood: correct defects of a previous bonus|tion and the title of the act. To Anchorage: W. E. Mitchell measure—Injtiative 169, adopted by | SRR R S R. J. Stowell, Albert Gotcher, Mar- the voters last November and later | cus Macovina, Roger Altman, Mrs declared unconstitutional by the| Virginia Maclean of McMinnville,(C Boylan and infant, William State Supreme Court. Oregon, is a guest at the Gastineau | Stewart, Harold Wilman, Dorothy Judge Wilson held the law is un- | Hotel. Parker, Loretta Whitaker, Olat Scorgaard. To Kodiak: Mrs. W. L. Fant and infant, Jessie Holt. To Naknek: 20 company em- ployees. MARTIN VICTORS BACK FROM CHICAGO FOR SUMMER HERE The Martin Victor family is be- ing welcomed back in Juneau after a winter outside. Mr. and Mrs. Victor and two of.their children, Denny and Gerald, retulr‘ned FPri Joyce, downed by mumps, had to be left behind in'the faniily home at Highland Park, a smart residence district near Chicago. Her ma- ternal grandmother will bring her here later. Mr. Victor's mother, Mrs. Mina Victor, accompanied the family as far as Ketchikan, where she is visiting before returning to Ju- neau. OREGON VISITOR PASSENGER SAILING SCHEDULE ALSO FREQUENT FREIGHTER SERVICE For turther information contact H. E. GREEN, Agent — Phone 2 SOUTHBOUND NORTHBOUND $.S. Baranof ;s.s. Aleutian S.S. Aleutian | S. S. Denali June 5 June 12 June 7 June 12 for Seward for Ketchikan Seattle for Haines Skagway Kodiak | Seldovia Seward 5 J ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPAN Seruing AU Alaska for ‘Wrangell Ketchikan Seattle LAUREL GOODELL SOUTH Laurel D. Goodell was a pas- senger for Seattle and Bellingham on PAA’s Memorial plans to _v‘nflz during the hex turn to her home in Juneau before June 30. i I | working with both the Mt. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE- JUNEAU, ALASKA . N eveR T | Fow Ao Word has been received by Mrs ‘mntrlrv Albegoff of the death of| her aunt, Mrs. Lydia Ann Webber, a prominent and beloved resident of Juneau for many years. : | ®he passed away rpgm_:‘;f;"s ?FF(:“::";‘::':E;" 1::; dl';;mweu. Maine, where she lived af- | * :\; x;) \\.:i;r‘ " wokdd " of Publicimr leaving Juneau in 1943 Mrs. | “}o]f1: ;’:l i . ;’aflufl'ell May-iwebb" made her home there with m\rd‘ Dre!i;ncxm'?‘ecwrw Vadiiea | sister, Mrs. Harriett, Knowles, May.fil g ar " | who Mrs. Albegoff's mother. 4 | Her death came after a long fll- b ver di S his | " m::nlx‘]i m;l;:;g‘ dl::‘;fl'if;ivtt‘wness. Mrs. Webber had been crip- S ‘mpm_mnc-e e pled with arthritis for a number | 4 il °9” | of 'years. Even pi ns outside - of sition and the responsibility 88t yer’ ocquaintance may remember | 2oes i | s b i goes with it. The department IS|yer celling Memorial Day. poppies| set up to give assistance to the|p,n o wheel chair needy and to give services that Will| qye o110 ohier close relative: sur- develop and improve the soclal|yiiin o s g g g s S. Albegoff's ' brother, standards of the Territory Of| ningt Thomas, of Augustd, Maine. Alaska. We shall work toward that| Mrs. Webber was laid to rest be- end 508 g ;s:de her mother at Waterville, All activities of the agency are|npaine where she was born Novem- governed by Territorial laws ‘"‘diber 4, 1881. expenditures are restricted to BD" Lydia Ann Webber lead a long propriations made ty the Territorial | ,ng ysefy] Jife, devoted to the ser- Legislature. Th e e Board of Publjl;vxce of others. As a graduate nurse, Welfare, comprised of one member| ghe camo to Juneau in 1914 and was each from the four divisions and! g, ¢}, staff for a while at St ‘he Governor of Alaska as its chair-| anns Hospital before going to An- man, determine the policies which chorage. should be carried out by the De-' There she nursed in the Alaska partment. s Railroad Hospital while Anchorage “Various programs administered wag stj) g tent city. With the by the Department include OM|oythreak of World War I, she en- Age Assistance, Aid to Dependent|jigteq in the Red Cross Nursing Children, Child Welfare Services, Corps and served at Camp Mills, at General Relief and Juvenile Code. | Mineola, Long Island, N. Y. “It is my sincere hope,” Harmon| afier the war, she returned to said, “that the public will take an Alagka nursing at the Pioneers' interest in the Department of Pub-| Hespital in Sitka, where she joined ic Welfare. I will endeavor from | tne American Legion. Later, she re- time to timz to keep the public tyrneq to Juneau and opensd the informed as to our activities In| aAmerican Beauty Parlor.Mrs. Web- 2ope that they will have a better|pe; jived in a home she owned on understanding of the problems as the hinhwav. until going to Maine they arise.” Isix years ago. died ihe confdence Bctd 2 TWO JUNEAU SCHOOL GIRLS FLY SOUTH FOR VISITS IN SUMMER ¢ do all he could to carry out his| duties to the best of his ability. Two Juneau school i southbound passengers (H'“A (OMMIES Anerican Tuesday to spend vaca- | tions in the northwest. REPOR'I'ED URGED] Heather Hollmann, ;M Aileen Savora, a former rs. ’Rose By The Associated Press) schoolmate who now lives in Bel- Diplomatic sources in Nanking, |lingham. She plans to be away the former Chinese Nationalist gov- | {rom Juneau for two months. ernment capital, said today that| Nancy McDowell, whose parents most countries favor recognition of are Mr. and Mrs. Bert McDowell, the Chinese Communists when their | Was the other young PAA passen- new government is established. |ger. Naney is visiting her relatives | ! | | The Territory’s new Director of Public Welfare, Henry A. (Hank) Harmon took over his post this morning. girls were on Pan | l caughter of Norman Kelly, plans to visit y May 22 in Hol- ($ i iz "SAILOR TAKES A WIFE” IS COMEDY AT 20TH CENTURY freshness, warmth nnd= athetic qualities which have ought Robert Walker to the w!]i e his first appearance as “Pvt.| Hargrove” are again revealed in hi | new role in “The Sailor Takes a Wife,” attraction today at the 20th | Century Theatre, with pretty June Allyson co-starred. i Permeated with humor and those down-to-earth touches familiar to, everyone who has known the em- burrassments and difficulties of these f'rst days of marriage, the| tory of “The Sailor Takes a Wite follows the often hilarious, often poignant attempts of John and Mary Hill to set up houseleeping, following their whirlwind ccurt-| ship. Their attempts to furnish o drab brownstone house apartment, the di¢ llusicnment of the young hus- cand when he views his wife on their bridal night arrayed in woclie pajamas and pigtails, the first dit.- .er that fails, the jealousy of Mary when the attractive refugee (Audrey Totter) enters the picture, the re- c'procated suspicion on John's part when Mary is given a mink coat on her birthday by her over-solicitous boss (Hume Cronyn), total up to 1 picture which eathes renlity and makes the onlooker feel he is part of the proceedings. . EISLER WILL SEEK RECOVERY $23,500 BAIL FROM U.S. PRAGUE., Czechoslovakia, June 1 —(M—Gerhart Eisler said today he going to try to get back his $23.500 i:ail from the United States. The German Communist said if he collects he will use the money to pay back a group in the United States who put up the bail he caused to be forfeited when he stole out of the United States on the Polish liner Batory. “I have instructed my Br'tish solicitors to see what grounds they can sue for,” he said. “It may be severa] weeks before we can de- termine if we have a basis for action on account of the warrant for my arrest issued by the Ameri- can Consul in England.” FROM ANCHORAGE Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Farell ot Britain, France and’ India, have|in Washington and Oregon. greater interests in China than the | ———— United States. American officials, these sources said, are urging that . recognition be used as a bargain- ng lever with the Communists for better treatment of non-Soviet in- terests. EARLE HUNTER, JR., IS HONORED AS NATIONAL SKI PATROL MEMBER Earle (Buddy) Hunter realized an almost life-long ambition last Wed- | nesday night, when he was made a member of the National Ski Patrol. He had apprenticed for a year, Hood | and the Santiam patrols, and last vear he took first place in the races between the Santiam and the Willamette Patrols, which takes in both the University of Oregon and the Oregon State College districts, | These races are judged on speed and first aid work, including trans- porting the injured patient. This year Buddy placed second, two- tenths of a second behind the win- ner. | At the ski banquet held in Eu- gene, Oregon, he was very surpris- | ed to learn that the judging com- mittee, composed of National mem- bers from the Northwest district, had waived the age requirement in order to present him with his mem- bership in the National organiza- tion. Buddy is a second year pre- medic student at the University of Oregon. | He will return to Juneau for the summer in about two weeks. OPENING OF HAINES (UTOFF 1§ DELAYED + In a telephone conversation to- day with Al Lubcke, Highway Patrolman, Frank A. Metcalf, Patrol Chief, learned that the date for reopening the Haines Cutoff to the Alaska Highway will not be known until Friday. .. “They are working {rom both Canadian sides,” said Lubcke, tough job. “I doubt that the road can be opened for traffic before June 10.” | Sizes 10 to 20. Hurry in today time buy at top speed and Alaska “but it's a | SECOND SON TO BROWNES Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Browne are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son, their second one, last night in St. Ann's Hospital. | The baby, who weighed seven pounds, will be christened Michael. | He joins a 2'%-year-old brother, Calvin. The father is with the| Alaska Development Bocr,d. | " Brazil ‘'was named ' after 'prazil- | wood, a tree which ylelded & red dyewood. i Anchorage are at the Baranof. SO CENTURY DOORS 7 SHOWS OPEN Te W ITE START and 7:20 and 9:30 : : PLUS—Selected ‘Shoris LATE NEWS by AIR EXPRESS From Gordon's specially priced collection you may select a striped and banded cham- bray sun-top frock with matching bolero. Gay styles. Charming fit. for a wonderful Summer- SUMMER-TIME is FUN-TiME/ Just one tiny price buys you a sun-loving costume you'll wear the summer through! GARDEN MAKIN IS FUN TO G 0 when you have the right accessories. BE SURE T0 INCLUDE Denim Sanforized - frousers; a bright siriped tee-shirt; or a plaid cotton blouse. You can get your GAY GARDEN GARMENTS at