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

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PAGE EIGHT BASES IN ALASKATO Close friends of Mrs, E. M. God-| Neither Winfield S. Pullen, Jr,| Two women from the Seatti# Mrs. Lois Beil Sandall, ‘mme‘"‘“c'it?uucgumo?u:}:zl]"re‘::;:i?iafs i dard are welcoming the opportunity | nor his friends who are greeting|headquarters office of the Alaska Past-President of the American .()f Rokd Carnmmissibrirs nppllca-‘ of r in Juneau before she him in Juneau can believe that this | Communications System are Federation of Soroptimists, will i ¥ | Friends Welcome - Mrs. Goddard on | Brief Vfisit Here | eing A THE DAILY ALASKA FMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA W.S. PULLEN, JR. | WOMEN OFFICIALS Soropfimist Leader VISITS HERE, FIRST | IN JUNEAU FOR To Speak Tonight; TIME I_ILM YEARS; ACS A(_IIVITIES Goverr&rjs House ——— FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1949 'BUS COMMISSION 1 FER'S - 49-Phone-13 SANITARY A | TEMPORARY PERMITS ‘ At an infoiinai meeting today ot the new Alaska Bus Transporta-; tion was made for five bus routes | e caves tomorrow to make her home | is his first trip to his home town | crossing paths in Juneau, both con- speak on the United Nations at originating in Anchorage. . Santa Barbara, Calif. She is on|in fourteen years. |cerned with betterment S. 8:30 o'clock tonight at the Gov- | > ¢ " { House Committee Ap— her way to join her husband there,| With his wife and Winfield Had- | service. s G in-‘rors”;:ifyM:f:f:;,f:m‘;:"eymfi::g : After disposing of the family|ley, their six year old son and the| Mrs. A. E. Rau, Civilian Person- vited to attend. | s o prove Measure for |nome in sitka, Mrs, Goddard ar-| third Wintield in the family, Mr.|nel Dfficer, came here from An.. Mrs. Sandall, who arrives here nn‘f};fi;;‘;;’“‘;,{,"‘::;;L‘s‘fi’;”io‘;‘ o M E A T C 0 ° M“ c f ' rived today by Alaska Coastal Air- | Pullen is Visiting his parents, Mr. chorage and Fairbanks on her first|the Prince George this afternoon, |, .ioc aiready op;racing. which i ary onsiruciion hes, and will go out tomorrow via | and Mrs. W. S. Pullen trip to the Territory. speaks on the invitation of the Ju- | oo g he «Grandfather - AR TR i In these fourteen years that fol- ~ She is reviewing civilian person-|ncau League of Women Voters. | oo Sl ooves et ane suen | Meat at Iis Best — at Lower Prices WASHINGTO July 22—(P— — Iluwed Mr. P}Allm's graduation from nel and procedures of the Juneau| Local Soroptimists plan a rull’mm";‘ uperat{on prior to January The House Armed Services Com- !lhe University of Washington, he|station, as she already has doneiagenda of entertainment for their|, “you, | " iieq to such a cer- mittee today approved a sma,-.NEw MFN!S'I‘ER has been with the General Electric for two of the four Alaska sta-|high-ranking officer during her' (. b 5 FREE BELIVE i AN g B i { Company, except for the years of tions employing civilians, !short stay here. Following a sight-|" o1 o L anonorace | R tion to improve domestic and for- | his war service with the navy when | Mrs. Rau flew in from Fairbanks seeing tour, Mrs. Sandall willi be |, = 0 i enom Anchorage to | eign t EN A'_ASKA FOR [he was stationed in Washington, | yesterday, and she will be here guest of honor at a buffet supper| oo .. == o o "o o including She ST A e e e until Tuesday, when she leaves for for Soroptimists at the home of poyo. ) | mous vote. The authorization bill a&s‘l‘ 13 YEARS" While he was still at the univer-|the Ketchikan station and then Mrs. Belle Simpson, Twentietn Uysiioneny alo asked for the| does not provide actual money i A2 |sity in Seattle, he was selected | geattle. Century Apartments at 6:30 o'clock. g BRIt o ohorage-Val- | ° ° ® The total includes: $247,356,481 | among the group of el en- | Mrs. Alice Ernst, chief telephon>| A special invitation has been €X-| .., paines route na Ioraroutes‘ T"us Week s Spec'als for the Air Force 00,862,801 1or | The Rev. A. B. Morgan, who will | 2ineering students for advance work | operator from . the Seattle office |tended to the members of the, = . mno o :Om Tetens “the the Navy, and $165596,400 for the | tsie over the pastorate of the Ju- With General Electric by whom he will be here until Tuesday.|United Nations Study Group 10 apncpors e-Ken:i Peni:sula ‘Road Army neau Methodist Church for first| Was employed until GE loaned him when she plans to go to Fairbanks.|nhear Mrs. Sandall in her nppear—lflnd lhegAnchora e-Mount McKin- 4 The committes knocked out a|services Sunday morning, is no|to _the navy in 1941 She is instructing operators|ance at the Governor's House. The o 0% p ¢ gy hwaz H0 [ provision authorizing $25,000,000 for | newcomer to Alaska. He and his| During the war he served as a | throughout the entire A.C.S. sys-|speaker is a member of the Unesco, EYAQ:]BIEI‘ fneeuy,; i R EL HAMS construction work of an emergency | wife, Mrs. Bernice Morgan, mm“';“'&‘_‘g‘i'x’ "“;’i’;“’;’or;“";“d“‘e f“"’f““ tem on the new ATA&T. single-|Committee, representing the Ameri-{, o0 conora g (g}ernldywmlams measure reached as a team from Point | S, had to do With ticket overseas telephone method. [can Federation of Soroptimists 5 flogiro e 4 j The Alaska projects woutld in- ;ixuruw to Ketchikan for more than | the construction of naval auxiliary, pive key A.C.S. men from out-|Clubs. ks T_‘"le‘z: gl:ste% wmp‘:;?c‘g “alf or w"nle clude $46,720,000 for Fort Richard- 13 years. ships and the’ conversion of mer- jying stations came to Juneau yes- _ :erm 1 q gtk oge v a6t son; at Whittier; $34,- The Rev. Morgan served as pas- Ch&f;[ Ishlpx iy .nav?l a‘L;(IIll:_nrs terday to learn the new overseas! y:::'es e i ’ : 4 e s sprie wRh R hile in service in ashington ; 856,300 6 Eieleon' Alr) Foroe Dade (o In Watpavks {0 sevenl years, |, Ui (U oliniiiee ) TR ; :HOME RUN WI“S It deferred action on the last- | pound near Fairbanks; $22,616,000 for| during that time building a chur O, to Kathatine Hadley & Obctne They are Sgt. 1st Cl. Lynn E mentioneq three, pending pubnc" ) Joy, Wrangell; Sgt. 1st Cl. Frank g communication equipment at and parscnage and conducting spec- | $7,664,600 for Elmendor! jal camp services for construction Field at Fort Richardson; $5,610,000 | workers, colored troops without a for Ladd Field at Fairbanks; $315,- | chaplain and for imos migrating | notice. | The road and bus commissionsl lare composed of the Governor,| ,!"ir.L daughter of a pioneer Wash- | g wilcox, Skagway; Corp. Eldon: | Ington State- family. Her grand-|o, penslee, &itka; Corpi Gene, J.! father was a member of Wash-|yartin, Haines, and Pfc. Edward FOR CUBS TGDAY NEW YORK, July 22—(P—Hank | ington State's r ' Treas ighway Engineer 00 for survey of Valdez pipe line: | to war construction centers. inkton QIS AUpIEDe G R. Dobrasz, Petersburg. K e AT eanay fd e $2,548000 for Kodiak runway ex- He is a graduate of Seattle! The Pullens have been living in BRI | cauer's home run over the left Gov. nest Gruening a re: : rRing ving quarters. Pacific Colleze in Seattle and was | DEnVer since the end of the war. R field rcof with one aboard in the surer Henry Roden met. Engineer | Dilen a0 Lving, GRS b Lttt SOC R0 1y i slectri FISH LANDINGS 7 i Frank A. Metcalf was absent on a | The Navy would spend over $46,- | ordained in 1936 in the Church of Still with General Llectr}lc, Mr. g seventh inning gave the Chicago i - 5 | ll lf l 000,000 enlarging its base at Guam. | the Nazarene, a sister church grow- | Fullen is in sales and engineering| | .\ 0 " joming 22,500 Cubs 8 6 to b victory over the | road inspection tour. Fi] o Whole A 2 T ing out of the Methodist move-| WOk With privately owned public| ~= .- o A e bonts |New York Giants today. It was; T s ® it pounds of salmon from three boats g 3 A ment | utilities, iSauer’s 15th homer of the year. |y v i is o 1. The Aurora (Albert Shramen) | | AMERI(A" BAR ASSN While in Fairbanks, Morgan serv- ' ~ThOUSh this is the younger Bul- '\ oo "4 500 pounds, the Al-| S YT | 6 ] . ed as a member of a committee of | 16N first visit north since their rita (Albert Wallace) 12,000 pounds WANTS PEN PAL oun ( MEETS IN SEP“MBER- three sent by the University of |Marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Pullen, Sr. | 4o popert Barren (Mathew| Patsy Dusel of Wiiow Street. UNEMPLOYED VETS 7 | Alaska to survey a site for South- | Dave visited their son and daush-| o o) 6000 pounds. Lancaster County, Pa., wants to east Alaska branch of the Univer- | ler-in-law—and their grandson— = = _| correspond with a by or girl| | : g " were landed 1,000 pounds of med P ] | sity. when they have been south each _ | of about her own age. She is 16 | witibar From the Defiance (Frank Olson) | of & €] ge. | Mrs. Morgan, also an ordained | : jums and 8500 pounds of black |vyears old, and a high school senior. | llonMEL The 72nd Annual Meeting of lh"‘im,nis(er in the Church of the Naz-, It is only when he realizes the cod for which no prices were guot- | She says, “Maybe some senior in WASHINGTON, Juiy 22—(®P— American Bar Association will be| arene, received her A. B. degree| Chanses that have come to Juneau| = % oS school there would enjoy writing.” The Senate Labor committee today held on September 5 to 9 in St.!from Pasadena College in Pasadena, | that he becomes aware of S Doy S N In her letter to the Alaska De-|voted unanimously to keep for an- | BAC“N SQUARES Louis, Missouri Frank E. Hol-| calif. She was an evangelist be- | 528€ of time, Mr. Pullen said, going COL. ALEXANDER OUT | velopment Board, Patsy adds that | other year the “52-20” program of her only desire is to live in Al-| unemployment benefits to veterans. ! = aksa. i H The present program expires next | — Monday. President Truman has; Federal mediators will try to iron| asked that it be continued. 4 ( back to those fourteen years. The Pullens flew north by Pan Ameri- R FLAS can. There was no air transporta- | Lt Col. J. D. Alexander, Adjut- x | ant General of the Alaska National man of Seattle is president of the organization and James R. Morford, Wilmington, Delaware, is chairm fore marriage and has worked as a team with her husband in the pas- torate. During the war she served se egates and | g5 exe " scretar anang | {ion to Seattle in those days bacl ol e HiThG: of. Delgaics ”“X‘ as_executive secretary of Tanana| ‘07 2 S0 EE B 0N RS O ot | Guard, went to Anchorage vester- : | will preside at the sessions of!valley chapter American Red Cross, | © 3. e Baranof hotel was not | . = ning to return this week-:out a deadlocked contract dispute: Under the program, unemployed that body. i = | bm“t r;n?‘, Solissinatalling h'ad- ex‘\fi, P s " | between the Bethlehem Steel Com- ' veterans receive government pay- Among the .prominent not suffered a fire. And there was i | pany and the CIO shipbuilding ments of up to $20 a week for | ho will take part in the program no housing shortage. | % s . | who will take pa | IS MARRIA. NSE workers union. A federal official| 52 weeks. About 600,000 veterans ‘ are the following from Alaska: | i il Wf Pullen and their 2 | says a union request for federal now are getting them. 0. ed “mp Boasl . . lh 7sc R E Robertson, Juneau, is. SCHEDUTED MONDAY | voune son will xemain in Juneau cun sinclawr, cook at the Hood mediation will be fulfilled prompt-| The committees action sends on : 2 a member of the House of Dele-| until early in August, visiting their | g,y cannery, and Marjorie Baron- | ly to the Senate a bill which would gates of the Association. Others| NIGHI BY Bpw (I.UB i family and many friends here. ovich have applied at the U. S EBEE o N AT B kcep the program in force. RBoth Siamdin Rib noasl lb 19c | SoRA LS g . . i ust . include: Robert Boochever, Juneau; Commissioner’s office for a mar- Frank Wilcox of Skagway regis- Senate and House must approve it Cecil H. Clegg, Fairbanks; W. N iy VANDA!.S D ” MAGE riage license. tered yesterday at the Gastineau. for the program to continue. Cuddy, Anchorage; P. J. Gilmore,| Monday's social meeting of the A & A ] POTITRR SRl TR e L g2 Jr,. Juneau; Lester O, Gore, Ketch- | Business and Professional Wumen'al jkan; John E. Manders, Anchor-|Club will be an indoor picnic in the ¢ U S FOREST (ABIN | age; Howard D. Stabler, Junceu;|social room of the Methodisc wds i Church. and A. H. Ziegler, Ketchikan (CL. NOYES ON | INSPECTION TRI? It will be a picnic in fact as far as food is concerned, with hot dogs, potato salad and ice cream and in- | doors because of Juneau's unpre- dictable weather. § Following the picnic supper, there! i AT POINT BISHO? A young Douglas sportsman who recently visited the Forest Service cabin at Point Bishop reports nine panes of window glass broken out Boned and Rolled Lamb Roast Ib- 79¢ '-“ii ke & 'P“"锑"“- . e Ly|ind tWo rows of shakes torn off eservations may e ma Ly e as v To tapest e ARO, consrus | "R B U MAe 17 cor wee e crewod Boned and Rolled Veal Roast b- 79¢ i 2 s 3 o b he a on o s tion projects, Col. John R. NOVES,| ppyy pregigent, or Elizabeth Moser. . JH]ST ARR'VE” esooe | Alaska Road Commissioner, was to called to the fact that money for ily to Anchorage yesterday plan- Mrs. Lillian Harris is chairman| yne repair of these public shelters { e o, be oack the first week in |0f the food committee, assisted bY| s limited and may reach a stage A 1 t i 1 f FRE ‘H FRUIT d | August. He will drive back by wa ‘l ances Paul. where maintenance is impossible Gomp e e assor men 0 an = o "Hataos: | R T | Care in the use of these recreation . H h t G d B f oo (eSS S | YEGETABLES and CANNING APRICOTS. ALSO ighest Grade Bee Anchorage and Kenai Peninsula BOAI SHop woRK i(rperu‘txon is requested in appre- . districts, and the Paxson’s-Cantwell | hending those thoughtless indivi- FULL LINE f CANNING JARS d LIDS ¥ Road which eventually will lead| $F o | duals who destroy Government a 0 an . -Chawe steuks - to Mount McKinley Park from the| Work at the Packard Boat Build- | property constructed for the use and enjoyment of the general pub- lic. ing Shop is progressing nicely on ! the Fish and Wildlife Service boats. | main highway. FRESH FROZEN In Anchorage later this month, | 5 Noyes expects to meet H. Rex Lee,| The two 24-foot shallow draft ex-| All are asked to please report STRAWBERB]ES 3 di i 1 lb. pkg. 45¢ assistant director of the Division of | press cruisers are expected to be in | promptly any damage of Forest - TE“nEnLflI“ or BEEF lb l 15 Territories and Island Possessions, | the water ahead of schedule. The | Service shelters to the Division RELIANCE A . s Lo Department of the Interior. public is invited to inspect them. | Supervisor’s office, U. S. Forest Dueto snow conditions, roadwerk | The Marina Shop is installing a ; Service, Juneau. CATSUP ° L] ° L] o o 2 b“ttles 39c is a good month behind schedule, | new Chrysler Royal Marine motor | et | according to Noyes, who described | with 3.95 to 1 reduction gear on ‘NORTHWESTERN ALASKA’ | KOOL AIR ¢ the Interior as having the latest|James Demmert’s troller Alice K., REPORT NOW AVAILABLE | N ¥ B . s spring and wettest June in recent! A new generator and new fuel lines SWEET PEAS ° LJ LJ 3 NO. 2 tills 39(9 history. were ’mstulled on thé cruiser Nika| A report on the econom.c oppor- | of now is available at the office of | owned by Geo: Ross of Seattle. tunities the Second Division America’s largest city—New York ey | —also got strike relief this morning A baby girl was born to Mr. and | when more than three thousand Mrs. Philip Mason of Yakutat this|bus drivers went back to work af- morning at St. Ann’s Hospital i ter an eight-day walkout AR 3 e BABY GIRL BOR! TO YAKUTAT COUPLE WILLIAMS POTATO CHIPS BISQUICK RELIANCE — SEGMENTS GRAPEFRUIT WILSON’S CERTIFIED HASH 3% DBISCOUNT on all cash orders of One Doliar or more Giant Size 10 oz. pkg. 49c Large Size 4% oz. pkg. 25¢ 1 Ib. 4 oz. pkg. 29¢ 2 No. 2 tins 49¢ o 1 1Ib. tin 39¢ 3 hottles for 69¢ ROUND STEAKS - - Ib. 7% GROUND ROUND - . Ibh. 7% CENTER CUT CHUCKS BEEF ROAST - . - - lbh.55 Rhode Island Red FRESH KILLED ROASTING FRYERS | PULLETS Ib. 59¢ | Ib. 59¢ Sanitary Meat JFREE DELIVERY the Alaska Development Board, Room 117, Federal-Territorial Bldg.‘ “Northwestern Alaska” was pre- | pared by Ralph Browne, assistant | manager of the Development Board. 1 ———— e ——— e to enjoy a Mellow Moment Pour a sparkling glass of Hamm’s Beer. Sipit. Linger over its luxurious flavor. For you'll never know how smooth and mellow a beer can be until you’ve tasted Hamm’s! It’s the beer for mellow moments. For your mellow moments, say “Here’s How!”” with Hamm’s. THEO. HAMM BREWING COMPANY, St. Paul, Minn, * Hanumi SBeet Smooth and Mellow Scheduled Delivery Scheduled Delivery DISTRIBUTED BY: ODOM COMPANY 328 Colman Bldg., Seattle, Washington

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