The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1949, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT CITY, CHAMBER ARE GUESTS OF TACOMA GROUP Tacoma Chamber of Commerce members brought greetin and goods with them yesterday on an | official visit to the City of Ju- neau, arriving here aboard the Princess Norah from the South at 3 o'clock A delegation of 27 members from the Puget Sound city were hosts to the Juneau Chamber of Commerce and city officials at a cocktail par- ty beginning at 5:30 pm | Highlight of the affair was a dcor prize drawing for Tacoma- | made products brought from the | South bys the delegation Stan Erdahl, president of the Tacoma Chamber, acted as master of cere- monies with E. R. Fetterolf, Ta- | coma manager, assisting Tacomans boarded bound for Skagway night. They plan a side trip to Whitehorse during the Norah's hold-over at the head of the Canal, | and will return South aboard the CPR vessel. | Taking the tour are Mr. and Mrs. | L. R. Bonneville, William Bosch, | Elmer Burnham, Mrs. Estella Dan- | jels, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Enger, | Dr. and Mrs. Rowland Hiil, Mrs. Blanche Holshouser, J. M. Ken: ler, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Lundgren, Mrs. Wallace A. MacPherson, Mrs. | Bessie M. McRae, Dr. and Mrs. E. | P. Nelson, Mrs. Annie Nielson, Mr. | Mrs. Mrs. T. W. Noble, Otto Perit, | Mr. and Mrs. Osie Thomas, Dr. and | Mrs. J. H. Whisler. ! the Norah | at 11:30 last | HEINTZLEMAN HERE General Mark Clark (right), Commander of the U. 8. Sixth Army wit San Franciscc, addresscs spectators gathered at Anzio, Italy, military cei country intends to march side by s (® Wirephoto via radio from Rome. Warehousemen’s ’ KIWANIS CLUBOF Proposed Strike | TRIP T0 EUROPE infermal, triena-to-friend Bill Winn told Kiwanis A possible Has Been Delayed SAN FRANCISCO, Jun warehouse stiike has Ler—! | In an account, e with your country until the geal of complete peace is achieved.” His speech was made during his pilgrimage to Anzio to honor those whe died with his wartime Fifth Al’l‘y. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR GREAT FUSS ' KICKED UP - BYSENATOR . ords, Reports of Afomic . Energy Commission. . ‘| WASHINGTON, June 1—(®— Senator Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) demanded today that the Atomic Energy Commission turn over to 1im a vast volume of records and reports, including memoranda of 1943 Roosevelt-Churchill talks at | Quebec on atomic matters. He also | acked FBI and security reports on |an unnamed number of persons. Hickenlcoper fired this demand {when the Senate-House Atomic | Committee opened hearings on his charge that there has been “in- credible mismanagement” of the Atomic Energy Commission under the chairmanship of David E. | Lilienthal. headquarters at the Presidio of metery. He promised Italians “my: asked the minutes of the Commis- jon's meetings and its records of | overtime pay to personnel in the jOiN I.A'"N GIRI.S Ithe Senator ticked off a l4-point AT NATL. CONVENE ist of material he wants. He gave |no immediate indication whether Happlest girls 'in Juneau, July 17, should e Mary Lou Fagerson or not the Commission would at- | tempt to comply with the request. Lilienthal has calle Hicken- coper’s charges an “Un-American” cifort to “smear” the Commisson = JUNEAU, ALASKA i1/ Hickenloop;r—Wams Rec-| Among other things, Hickenlooper | s ¥ 8 3 " WEDNESDAY,JUNE 11949 FLIER 1S SHORT | OF FUNDS AGAIN Arrives in Buffalo by Train| from Toronto to So- licit Money BUFFALO, NY, June 1—-#— Mrs. Richarda Morrow-Ta't, the British housewife on a globe-circ- ing flight, has arrived here—by train—to raise funds for her air} trip home. She came here yesterday -from Toronto, Ont., where she landed | after taking off at Chicago last| Zaturday. She said :celore leaving | Clhicago that her next stop would se Buffalo but told newsmen that ‘engine trouble” forced her down at Toronto. . “Also, there was a bit of a de- partmental mixup at Chicago,” shc added. She apparently refe.red tc a ruling by the Civil Aeronautics Authority grounding her BT-13 war surplus trainer plane because she did not hold a certificate of; airworthiness for it. I Mrs. Morrew-Tait s said she intends to return to Britain later via Greenland and Iceland. She tarted her global trip last August I . | i BRITISH WOMAN _ |BOWRON ELECTED ! Lloyd Aldrich. off because Bowron's lead in the April primary lacked the necessary | majority over all his opponents. | Aldrich was next highest. WALT SINN JOINS HIGHWAY PATROL After 3'; years as an officer of | the Juneau Police Department and | lately serving as assistant chief, Walter O. Sinn today became a ;member of the Alaska Highway Patrol. According to Highway Chiet Unofficial, returns from all of | Frank A. Metcalf, Sinn will be a the city’s 3,362 precincts gave Bow- | patrolman-at-large, his first tem- ron 238,190 votes to Aldrich’s total | porary duty to be at Fairbanks. of 207,211, | Sinn will go to the interior this The election vesterday vas a run- weekend. FOR FOURTH TERM ASMAYOR ATL. A. LOS ANGELES, June 1.—M— Mayor Fletcher Bowron today was elected to a fourth term by a 30,000 plurality over his bitter political and personal foe, City Engineer PLENTY OF SEATS AVAILABLE T0 SCANDINAVIA practically any day of the week in May, June and July By popular demand, SAS has doubled its flight schedule to Scandinavia, now offers nine trips a week. Youre still sure of the: | Club members of his recent three- Feen postponed. Stewards of CIO |.nd Shirley AL person. He h declared that thei H FROM WASHINGION; |month European trip, at today's Warehousemen’s Union local voted | They will have good reason for n. m‘i‘cl“”pmj‘:zl g s ol 4 space you want—when you want it—in May, uncheon meeting i ranot to meet Saturday to re-examine the ng happy B e of * et s o b g0 She Baseng "y | feeling happy with the prospect of| () o) the civilian commission took | June or ouly. n 1946 and ' (HAMBER SPEAKER | Gold Room. bargaining case. ja trip by plane to Muskzzon, Mich. T Vicariously, the group made the The strike had been authorized |z 1 three-weck ence it h, who arrived | Atlantic crossing on the huge liner for anytime after midnight last!gil: from e 2 | Queen Mary, deoarked cy lighter Dight. It would affect about 350 Western Hemis it Cherbourg and tcok tne Loac distributors in San Francisco Bay it over from the Army now is “really relling You can be in Scandinavia just 17 pleasant hours after leaving New York when you fly SAS. You can spend more time in the home- land . . . fewer hours in travel . . . less time B. Frank Hentzlel from Washington, D. C., this after- OUT FOR TWO-MONTH | | | noon after five months in rthe na- | 5 0ot G R tion’s capital, will be speaker of | ' to Paris for a de luxe v-.a- aTed. i o et e WL NaCA T of away from home and job. the day tomorrow when the Cham-| s 0n an averaze budget T L\j;):'%l L(f:.l A 5(.“\% ”..cn‘cm::pir:mx;t‘ Bound fof a two-month vacation | o . ) ber of Commerce meets at the| Winn told of travel and iiving [ among rewresentatives feom eiesy| 1D the states this week arg Mrs, the : | ® THE ONLY DC-6 planes—modern, spaci- Baranof Hotel. A |conditions and the famed art of MER(ED ON tate n the tnion and U.S. Tersi.|Senna Powers and her dauchter ous, dependable — fastest to Copenhagen, Heintzleman, Alaska’s Regional|dinng on the contine and | ‘m“f hosts to two Beverly, who left via Pan Ameri- west Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki. Direct connections Forester, and one of the foremost | -omething of entertainment and WAY Ifl ALASKA 3 ) Latin Ameri CAn Airways. They plan to spend f to other mujor cities. authorities on pulp mills, is expect- | sightseeing in Paris and Florence, LAl country several weeks in Seattle visiting | ***¥OF , { ed to bring first hand news on |including details of a daredevi bus " A 3 Juneau Ecout trcops had the|With Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Powers o | © FREE SCANDINAVIAN MEALS, smorg- vital legislation dear to the hearts -ide along the Riviera. fi 1 honor of having two girls Selected | And other friends and relatives, and b 1o | asbord and refreshments. of Alaskans. Answering questions from the b i ey s~ will then go to San Francisco. Mrs. i During his Washington stay, | <udience, Winn discussed the atti- i g p {:?JZ“SHWAI.W,“ s T;,Z“L'l'fxgn::’i“"““"‘“ will return here about Aug. the ® NO TAX ... no tipping . . . no charge for Heintzleman has been particularly | ‘vdc of the French pcople toward DR e e S e ‘ * 11, while Beverly will return tc Se- baggage up to 66 pounds. active in promoting appropriations | t-day Germany, how Ameri- Velknown old La Merced, bald-}3t bhe encarm: B |attle to remain with her grand- See Your Travel Agent or for roads for Southeastern Axa;ka,: an press and radio coverage of lj(?‘dcd "19ur-m:\s:9d 280400“: “fq:::;,::n,l‘llmx;"\ o [l;;)t“.lll:eix:z arents until school starts. 454 i, eataatiment of ' pulp | Eviops. combares o’ that, of (the &To00R s on ner wax. 1o Ehme) 06 SRR S Lo S e \’Da%s NORTHWEST AIRLINES ndusury here. | nglish, and matters of iaterna-|Pass and Port Moller on the/ R - A ¢ | “DITH WELLINGTON Westward Hotel. Anchorage Heintzleman, who is a graduate of | tional exchange and trade. | Alaska peninsula for the Peninsula [ 1% t.1e Scout traditon of sql WITH FOREST SERVICE Mai _-6_ He Yale University of Forestry and, Member Martin Victor was wel- | Packing Company. suffimenc)f, delezates :md. th§l? e o 5 ain 765 has been in Alaska since 1918, is|-cmed back after a winier in Chi- was when she used ner|lOOps are expected to raise m’éi Miss Edith Wellington, who has Tex:y n:rTl 5 ‘.l'lll'l‘; l one of the Territory’s autsmnmng‘ ago, and a visiting Kiwanian was (oI hrl;: he: ;l;,\;’o hhme r;gg rjk;fi;;\ry for expenses of the et pradtetod o ~Dougiae. Bigh o eMnll:xr;nBa‘;I‘m i:a f . SO T e which put ou orse- | long V. 7 i f S public men. ;fl;!roduCEdib) Eckley K. Guerin | rower._malke like they were going| Theater managers of Juneau 1021, today became a stenograph- ranking favorite every. | George Mesley of the Independence, " |came to the ald of Girl Seouts}¢r-in the operations division of the where. You'll like its breezy, DETROIT HOODLUMS, GAMBLERS ROUNDED UP IN POLICE RAIDS DETROIT, June 1.—(#—One hun- | dred and thirty men are in jail as| a result of a sweeping police clean- | up of gambling and hoodlum hang- outs. ‘The police are seeking clues to the shooting of Victor Reuther | through a window in his home last week. More than a year betore, his brother, Walter Reuther, was similarly shot. Walter . is president of the CIO| United Auto Workers, and Victor is the Union’s educational director. Both have opposed gambling in auto plants, and one of the police | theories is that gambling interests | may have caused the shootings. MAHONEYS ARE BACK AFTER MONTH OUTSIDE Bringing seven Ketchikan pr's-i oners who now are residents of the | federal jail, U.S. Marshal William | 7. Mahoney arrived on the Bara-| nof. . Mrs. Mahoney accompanied her| hustand on the month’s trip, in| which the marshal took prisoners | to McNeil Island Penitent'ary near | Tacoma, Wash., and to a women’s institution in Virginia. When official duties were over,| the Mahoneys went to Washington | on business, vis'ted friends in Newi York and later made stops in Chi- | cago and Seattle enroute home. Mahoney saw Delegate E. L.| (Bob) Bartlett several times in| ‘Washington, D.C., and reports that he is working hard for statehood. While there, Mahoney attended the treason trial of Judy Coplon, and in New York, he sat in on the Communist trial beng heard be- fore Judge Medina. Mahoney re- ports that this has now “settled down.” Exploding Bomb Greefs Franco on | Visit fo Barcelona BARCELONA, Spain, June 1—® —A small bomb exploded today in the icellar of traffic police head- ftefs during Generalissimo Prancisco Franco's visit to this Catalonian-capital. No one was in- Jured. | | .ntroduced the speaker. | JAYCEE MAN IS T0 | at Mo., Kiwanis Club. Mesley, who is spending a week | in Juneau on his first tour of | \laska, represents the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormon), which has acadquarters in Independence. Mesley originally came from Sid- | ney, Australia. | James S. McClellan presided and | Gene Vuille, program chairman, REPRESENT ALASKA | AT NATIONAL MEET Warren Houston, newly elected Junior Chamber of Commerce President, left today aboard Pan American A‘rways bound for Colo- rado Springs, Colo, and the na- tional convention of the Junior Cham:er of Commerce on June 7-10. Houston will be Alaska's official representative at the convention of ! an expected 5,000 Jaycees and| families. He plans to join his wife on the West Coast and to drive to the con- vention city. As Alaskan delegate to the na- tion-wide meet, Houston will ap-/ pear as a speaker in a' Civic Im- provement Forum next Friday. The Houston's plan to spend sev- eral weeks in the states vacationing ! following lh’e convention. ( SEASON'S HIGH AT | 17.30 PER POUND With prices tenths of a| cent under la season’s hight of | 18 cents a pound, four boats made landings today totaling 30,700 | pounds. | Selling to Alaska Coastal Fish-| eries: 31-C-450 (Felix Stuck), 00 | pounds of small selling at 12 cents, | 10,000 mediums at 17.30, 2,500 large 16.35; Guide (Rozert Zuboff), 500 at 12.05, 1,000 at 17.25, 500 at 16.05 | Going to Engstrom Brothers: | Tenakee (Ronald John), 2,000 at 12.05, 6,600 at 17.30, 4,000 at 16.35; 31-B-482 (Peter Ludwig), 400 at| 12.05, 800 at 17.25, 400 at 16. | LB SRR | GIRL FOR ROBIEHAUDS ‘T A baby girl was born at St. Ann’s | Hespital this morning to. Mr. apd | Mrs. Joseph Robiehaud. The infamt | weighed 6 pounds 10 ounces, Rabu‘-\ haud is with the Alaska Communi- cation System. J 1 color ike mad with a snappy six knots. But today it is actually faster to take her up the inside Rpassage, where sails would be a detr.ment end hindrance to mansuvering, than to fake her outside to spread her wings. And it is illegal to raise| them on Puget Sound. | E. A. Rutherford of San Juan| Fish and Packing Company, an! affiliate of the packing company operating her, explained so much; packing is now done in Southeast | Alaska that the inside passage is| vsed exclusively now. She annually | cans from 40,000 to 50,000 cases. | She came out of Todd Shipyard | Sunday, where a section of her| wooden keel was replaced atter, having been damaged last season.| Baby Delivery Via (aesarean, Wached, Color Television, PHILADELPHIA, June 1—®—A, group of newspaper men and; women yesterday watched by coler television receivers the caesarean delivery of a girl at the University | of Pennsylvania Hospital. The demonstration, sponsored Ly | Smith, Kline & French Labora-| tories, Inc, was descrbed as th. | first public viewing of surgery by television. | CAA INSPECTION 1 Frank O. Berry is here from An- chorage to assist two CAA officials | from Washington, D. C. in their federal airways inspection tour of | Alaska. H The visitors are Carl O. Bunnell, land lines miaintenance investigator, and Ezra F. Nichols, who assists him and also does liaison work. The party was to leave today for Yakutat, Anchorage and Fairbanks, | atter heing here since Saturday. ~ 0 three conferred this morning with Capt. Svend C. Hansen, ACS Sector Commander. MARRIAGE LICENSE Bernice Vivian Guthmiller and Terrance J. Magorty have applied for a marriage license. The bride- elect is a clerk-typist in the Health Department, and Magorty drives & truck for the California Grocery. He also is a prominent Juneal baseball player. d CPL. FISHER RETURNS Opl.- Staniey 'F rdsh training in Seattle a val has returned to ACS duty here. He|.. is assigned to the communications center maintenance section. in their drive for funds, and al‘e[ offering half the proceeds irom| all tickets sold to both movie houses on Wednesday and Thurs- day evenings this *wezk and for the two succeeding weeks. Tdickets can be obtained for either, or all, week's performances from Girl Scouts who ars covering the town in troop squads to aid in sending their delegates to the con- vention. » Movie tickets are being sold by Scouts at regular prices. Half the ticket amount is turned over di- rectly to the Scouts. | Scouts say, “If you plan on tak- ing in a movie tonight or tomorrow ight, buy your ticket frcem a Girl Scout and help send Shirley and Mary Lou on their way July 17. SERVICES FOR PAPPAS TOMORROW IN CHAPEL ARt | Funeral services for Pete Pappas, who died yesterday morning at St. Ann's Hespital, will be held Friday at 2 o'clock at the chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. . i HAPPENED TO HOME? IT'S worth more to- day than ever hefore. And that’s danger- ‘ous! Dangerous be- cause that new high value calls for MORE insurance protection. i You can lose plent, if you're UNDERIN- SURED! Play safe! Make certain now that you're insured ade- quately! Shattuck +Agenecy Seward Street Juneau Phone 249 Forest Service regional office. The young “career woman” is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James ‘Wellington of Douglas. ILAH PARMENTER BACK After complete examinations “go- ing through” the Virginia Mason Clinic in Seattle, Mrs. Ilah Par- menter returned to Juneau and spent a week at home before re- turning to work. She is again in the Baranof Beauty Salon, of whick she is pro- prietor. The horseshoe was regarded as a charm against witchcraft during the middle ages. casuai look and its light, easy weight. Cravenette showerproofed against spring showers. Come in and try on The Mallory Dal- las today. Other fine Mal- lory Hats, $10.00 CASLERS MENS WEAR | feel the difference in a Mallory ® 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 | *Reg. Trademark CANDINAVIAN AIRLINES SYSTEM Seattle: 824 White Bldg., SEneca 6250 O~ Chrysler Oér Drrve through high water... Start instantly in dampest weather! You can’t stall this amazing Chrysler High Compression %WZ %/& PRESTOMATIC FLUID DRIVE® TRANSMISSION «+. drive withous shifting. B AN Spitfire Engine even if you play a hose on it! % Latest and greatest develepment in high com- % Fmssmn! Pioneéred by Chrysler engineers who P irst introduced high compression to America 25 ¥, X years ago! Featuring still higher compression Chrysler’s mighty Spitfire again steps years ahead. Now you get completely waterproofed ignition. system, coil, distributor, wiring-harness, Spark Plugs—everything! And again our developments in engine protection keep pace with our advances in performance! Full Pressure Lubri- cation prolongs engine life. Exclusive Full Flow Oil Filter keeps oil so clean that a change is necessa; only every 5,000 miles. Chemically treated.cylin uce cylinder wall scoring, save on oil. New Wide- Gap Resistor Spark Plugs cut misfiring, conserve fuel. Superfinish reduces wear of moving parts. And these are only a few of the Chrysler engineering “firsts” the others can’t match. Phone us today for a demonstration. BUIVDUH {

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