The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 8, 1949, Page 6

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PAGE SIX *3 NAME DATES FOR CANNERY ELECTION IN'S. E ALASKA { Dates for cannery elections in Southeast Alaska were made known | this weekend by Kenneth R. Bow- | man, AFL organizer for Alaska, who | is in Ketchikan taking part in labor-industry pre-season negotia- | tions | Bowman said he had received | word from Seattle that NLRB election officials will be in Ketch- ikan August 16, and the election | probably will be conducted there| Aug. 17-18 for all Ketchikan can- neries “On the same date elections are, scheduled in Petersburg on the same basis,” he said. “There will not be any other definite dates set | for other canneries owing to weath- | distances, etc. | “All workers who worked five| days in 1948 will be allowed to vote. This goes for canneries which will| be shut down or operating this year er Miss Marie Doyon i And CPR Officer | In Evening Vows| A nautical theme will highlight | Traveling Licns were 1 & h wedding ceremonies for a St. Ann’s | this noon to gives fellow mrmberslM”Chnm Marine and Fisheries. I elan in conipiling o tew. Territbirial s Bowl. wealee ) thrmitting, The Hospital nurse and an officer from| His appointment to the commit- " | Mr. Carcy, a memoer of the lyphce ¥ % la look at the world outside in brief 3 traffic code to be issued mnext women’s - division has been post- aboard the Princess Kathleen to tee was approved by the House last Board of Lectureship of The i o o talks about their summer vacations.| month, according to word from An- | poned for one week to permit more be held tomorrow evening at 8:15 week through passage of a resolu- | Mother Church, The First Church : 491 program Chairman Dr. John Gej ! ion introduced by Chairman B, O. chorage, where Frank Metcalt,| ¢ Cnrist: Sclentist, + i - Bbston to sign up. ¥ in_the-Catholic Church. ler gave an account of travel on 2 ¥ Territorial Highway Engineer, has J y *| Those signed up in the men’s sec-| For the bride and groom, who Bland of the committee. This . | Massachusetts, spoke in the First 5 % g J the Alaskan Highway after calling!, . been conferring with truck-line 7 i tion are: Stan Freeman, Norman met aboard the Princess Norah on brings to a total of four thé com- Church of Christ, Scientist. He ! g i |on Edward P. Chester, Roy Pera- : .| operators and others. Binns, Elmer Lipsey, Tom Powers, | the bride’s voyage to Alaska, @ |qre iotoi { mittes amslanments for, AlaskMEhiatio S came to Juneau under the auspices| p,sior pigornia, W. Riedi, Robert 4 rovich an slie Avrit. b s iti etcalf said the present 55- ;i i , W. ) 1 elongs ionall; 95-|of the Juneau First Church dolaghue B S o 2 A s 2 Ou,Boochever and Clarence Keating special wedding cake is being bak- | ed in the shape of the good ship| Norah. Miss Marie Antoinette Doyon,| daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henri | Doyon of Montreal, Canada, and Mr. Henry White, CPR officer, will| be principals in the evening ex-| change of vows. | Capt. William O. Hughes, master of the Princess Kathleen, will give| the bride in marriage. Two fellow | officers from aboard the vessel will act as attendants to the groom. Attending the bride will be two St. Ann’s nurses, the Misses Linda Musgrave and Doreen Pablow. | A reception in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel will follow the ceremonies. Mr. White will join his ship in| Skagway to make the return voy- | age. Miss Doyon plans to leave Juneau at the end of the month, to join her husband in Vancouver.f B. C., where they will make their| home. ED LEVIN TO SPEAK " AT ROTARY MEETING | ON LATIN COUNTRIES | Kay Malcolm. Poor called a spec LIONS TALK ON SUMMER TRAVELS: MAKE POOL PLANS| called on President Val Poor announced that preliminary plans for the heat- | ing of the Evergreen swimming pool had been submitted by Ma 1al meeting of the board of di- rectors and pool committeemen for 5 pm. in Don C. Foster's office to discuss further plans for Licns pool heating project. Larry Wilcox make a report on| a recent meeting of the finance committee early class for fund-raising activ- ities to finance a big delegation of Juneau Lions to the 1949 Alaskan Lions convention to be held in Seward, Guests included iz Rev. Law- rence Nevue of Mt. Edgecumbe the Rev. Thomas Morgan and L. B. Williams, ANS teacher enroute to Point Barrow. |FAIRBANKS FiRM BIDS LOW ON KOAD PROJECTS Bids were coened this morning in the Burean of Public Roads oifice on two rcad maintenance and improvement projects near Ketchi- kan. ‘The low combined bid was sub- Peter Wood made an| *BIG E’' COMES B A C K_pecommissioned in January, 1947, the carrier USS Enterprise « passes up the East River to the New York Naval Shipyard for an eight-months overhauling. 'Delegrale‘ farllell Appoinfed io House Marine, Fish Commitiee Delegate Bartlett ber of the House Committee is now a mem- on to the Committees on Agriculture, Armed Services and Public Lands, as do the Hawaii Delegate and the Puerto Rico Resident Commissioner. BOUGLAS NEWS MRS. SPETHMAN VISITS Mrs. Hermu: —peth:aan is a | guest of her daughter and family | Mr. and Mrs. James Devon, having arrived here last Tuesday on the Aleutian. This is her first visit to Alaska and, although it is much | wetter than her home in Omaha, | Nebraska, she likes the country | very much. So far she even like |the rain. She will visit here for | several months. COUNCIL TONIGHT The Douglas City Council wnll] meet this evening in the Council | Chambers of the City Hall for a regular meeting. There will be sev- eral committee reports and housing | discussions, as well ds the usualf | business and paying of bills. The meeting starts at 8 p. m. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA o 'NEW TRAFFIC CODE UPS SPEED LIMI, ' CHECKS ON LOADS Safety is the prime considera- mile-an-hour speed limit will be raised to 50, as that is considered a safe speed on the improved high- ways with modern automobiles. Regulations controlling 10ad iation of stations for checking weights, will be part of the new traffic code authorized by the 1949 Legislature. Provisions for reduced load limits during the spring breakup !are intended to prevent damage to paving. "HAP’ O'BRYAN RETIRES CAA AIR SAFETY POST Norman J. (Hap) O'Bryan, co- ordinating agent for the air safety ivision of the Civil Aeronautics Administration in Juneau, has re- tired after more than 20 years sefv- ice. Mr. and Mrs. O’'Bryan left this morning aboard the S.S. Aleutian bound for Sarver, Pennsylvania, O'Bryan has served with the CAA here for the past two years, form- erly working out of Anchoragesfar about four years. His prior CAA service as an air carrier inspector was in the States. - limits for trucks, as well as instal- where they plan to live on a farm. | CHRISTIAN SCIENCE | LECTURE IS HEARD " HERE LAST EVENING | Better health and happier rela- | tions in home and business, as well as financial abundance, can be | demonstrated with scientific_cer- {tainty by application of the" rules for living as taught by Christ Jesus, declared Archibald Carey, C.S8.B.,, in a public lecture here last night on Christian Science. “The Founder of Christianity, Christ Jesus, did not overlook ordi- nary, everyday needs,” Mr. Carey said. “When people were sick, he healed them. When they needed money to pay taxes, it was pro- vided. When the multitude were hungry and needed fcod, he fur- nished tread and fish. When they were unsuccessful in fishing, he showed them what to do. He gave that unsurpasseq rule for improv- | ing human relationships — ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy- self” He did not ignore human needs; he provided for them. His teachings were practical and effec- tive: “If we were able scientifically to understand and utilize the laws which Jesus used, should not we, also, be able to provide for these ordinaty human needs? It would | seem that a scientific understand- | ing of the Christianity Jesus taught and exemplified should enable us to do this. That is what Christian | Science is doing today for thou- | sands of people.” | Christ. Scientist. | The lecturer toox note of the otjection frequently heard, that the acts of Christ Jesus were mira- | |cles which cannot be performed today. “Just }nsked. | He then drew a parallel between the modern miracle of flight and ‘the wonderful works accomplished | |by the master Christian long ago.| | “The flight of an airplane,” he! | continued, “the instant communi- | cation of radio, even the ordinary i performance of today's automobile, | would seem either impossible or | i miraculous to the ignorance of the :opening years of this century. But: ;au these things cease to be miracu- }lous as the laws which produce |them are understood. i+ “Fifty years ago the laws of flight | | were not understood. Yet these |laws were the same then as they are today. The laws have nof changed. Only ignorance of these |laws prevented their use in 1901. | “If we should consider the so- | called miracles of Jesus with the |same scientific open-mindedness, | !search for the laws involved, and |learn to appreciate the operation {of the divine laws which he so| perfectly understood, might we not‘: what is a miracle?” he; R— British Scholar fo Head Pariy io Pribilof Islands Dr. G. C. L. Bertram of S‘,,‘I John's College, Cambridge, England, has been appointed a visiting re-} search scholar according to an an- nouncement released by Dr. Terris Moore, president of the University of Alaska. Dr. Bertram will head a party of research workers to the Pribilof Islands where he will study the fur seal. On his return it is hoped that he will deliver a lecture at the University on his findings. This study on the fur seal is made possible through a grant-in- aid by the Arctic Institute of North America. Dr. Bertram is being Lrought to this country from Eng- land by _the Conference Board of Associated Research Councils Com- | mittee on International Exchange of Persons, which group is the co- operating agency of the govern-, ment’s exchange program under | the Fulbright Act. The University of Alaska is acting as the sponsor- ing agency for this study. MEN'S SECTION OF TENNIS TOURNAMENT STARTS TOMORROW The men’s diviswn of the tennis| tournament gets started tomorrow’ night at 7 o’'clock in the Evergreen Both men and women may sign! up for the tournament by con-: tacting Al Carlson at the Evergrcen" Bowl or calling radio station KINY. | Men may sign up until tomorrow noon. DIVORCE GRANTED On an action transferred from the Third Division, Judge George W. Folta today signed a decree granting Doris C. Effler a divorcei from James T. Effler, with restora- tion of her maiden name, Doris C. Morris. Almer J. Peterson was Mrs. Effler’'s attorney. the lives of thousands of people. And it can help each one of us. . “The Christian Science textbook,' ‘Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures’ by Mary Baker Eddy, Discoverer and Founder of | Christian Science, says (p. 494), ‘Divine Love always has met and every human always will need’.” meet Steams-Massage || MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1949 MEETING TONIGHT The American Legion at 8 o'Clock IN THE LEGION DUGOUT Visiting Veterans Invited CHESTER ZENGER, Post Commander JOHN PARMENTER, Adjutant Plumbing © Heating Oil Burners Telephone-319° Nights-Red 730 Harri Machine Shop, Inc. AnoTHER CLIPPER' EXTRA— (J o Scoonionty, blaHia! The Clippers %have been flying the Alaskan skyways for /7 years ...carried nearly two hundred thousand passengers fii Our flight crews know their routes 2= T ...know how to make you comfortable : For dependable Clipper service, call . .. C RANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 L) Ed Levin, traveler and lecturer,| well known as an accompanying | Mitted by Reed and Martin, Fair- Mrs. O'Bryan leaves her post as| be enatled to understand the same VISITING IN DOUGLAF | 4 4 a clerk in the supply division of |1aws he utilized and produce siml-_’ The Earl Miller tamily of Sitka 3\ Dellaway AN é"; guide for Father Hubbard, wili|banks, in the amount of $778.822.90. | speak to the Rotary Club tomorrow | The Bureau will recommend this | arrived on the Channel over the|the Veterans Administration. ]’“:. results? | e R A CRS FIR 1 N L T | st By ol {bid to the Commissioner in Wash- | weekend via Alaska Coastal. The| Appointment of O'Bryam’s suc-| “This is what Christian Science Heallh s l ; '[/ 4, ' Levin, who has spent much ofiingmn. family includes five girls, Erlene,|cessor will go up before a CAA|is doing. People are being healed Ys em 0”[‘, ””A’ ;/ his time for the past two years Other estimates were by R. J.|Darlene, Kathlene, Colleen, and| Board of Selection to be an-| of diseases that are considered in-| . 7 %M scuth of the border, will speak on| Sommers and Keil & Peterman,| Lauraleen. Mrs. Miller, with her| nounced within the near future. ‘f:x::m:;eD:;zee;aworg‘il::;;sshg;?:;g PHONE 667 intcos i g = o Mexico and Guatemala. Accom- |Juneau; Stock & Street, Anchor-|daughters, is staying at the home ~ | ? | . panied by his wife the former|2ge, and Morrison-Knudsen, Se-|of her mother, Mrs. Alex Demos.| BIG FISH FOR LITTLE GIRL |Deeds are being met. The sclen-| Plasmatic Treatments)| TO SEATTLE + HAWAIl » ROUND-THE-WORLD * KETCHIKANI el B g b Bllaeingic O Rl nilon . tific understanding which Christian, ! JUNEAU * WHITEHORSE * FAIRBANKS * NOME spending the summer here doing| One project is for 15 miles north | terday with the Sitka ball team, is| Miss Sylvia Fredrickson, eight|Science brings has o O S — year cld niece of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rusher, yesterday caught a 27- pound salmon at, Tee Harbor. Mrs. Rusher said that this topped any of the salmon she and her husband i WASHINGTON —(P— President | caught in the Golden North Sal- . | Truman signed a bill appropriating | mon Derby. They both won prizes; | By landing their first salmon g 750000 to comtat a grasshopper|in the competition. Sylvia's father,| young Katherine, and Pat Orme nyacon threatening crops in the | Mr. Harold Rusher, is a fisherman Approves Repeal Of Alaska T_ax_es m‘;reuli’l‘)eg'uyné:;‘fi‘ia‘r)g ‘;heslr ;/};2_ st and midwest. isailing out of Seattle. WASHINGTON, Aug. 8—®—The | Kinnon's Hyak. With their moth- Senate Insular Committee approved ©f» Mrs. James Orme, the family] returning to Sitka, but the others E will spend two weeks visiting their {many friends and relations here and | | YOUNG ORMES PROVE £ the (Clagpy TN THEMSELVES FISHERMEN research at the Museum library on|©f Ketchikan, the other for 2.7 Eskimo dogs. | miles to the south. £=1IIIIIIII!IIIlIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIITfiIIIIIlIIIIIIIfII]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIfiITI—IIII!IIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIWITIIIIIllllllllllllllll Prove to yourself the difference ; between SANITONE and regular dry cleaning Senale Commitiee e e For Estimates on that New Basement, House today a House-passed bill repeal-| [ | ing Federal license taxes in| Katherine, by her own count, i P, s— i | Alaska. |landed ‘five—two of them hooked or rlrevlac p“n“g 4' Evenmgs =11 The Territorial legislature has|by Mrs. Orme. Pat surprised ev- We have enough PUMICE and CONCRETE | enacted a series of license taxes which cannot tecome effective untii the Federal texes are repealed ‘The committee also approved a House bill to authorize sale of five acres of public land on the Rich- ardson highway in Alaska to Ford J. Dale of Fairbanks. FOWLER TO WESTWARD Howard Fowler, associate mining engineer for the Territorial De- partment of Mines, was on Sat- urday's war According to Mines Com- missioner B. D. Stewart, will spend about two weeks in the Cordova and Copper River areas, later going to Anchorage. He will spend the rest of the season in the Third Division. SGT. McKENZIE TO CRAIG After nearly two years here, as radio operator in the Juneau ACS station, Sgt. Rgbert McKenzie was to leave today. He will take over the ACS station at Craig PNA flight to the west- | Fowler | were high’ fishermen, eryone aboard the Hyak when he caught a salmon on the aluminum rod given him as a toy. light 'BLOCKS for several houses EARL CRASS AND SON By his Great Straight Bourbon SISTER IS VICTIM e . » 3 i OF POLIO EPIDEMIC Real drinking enjoyment is L4 Century” A sister's illness has taken Miss @ . ry Betty Brown, Alaska Native Ser- vice secretary, to her home in Fort Worth, Texas. Miss Brown left by plane to be with her sister, victim of the polio epidemic Brazil is somewhat larger than the United States and three times ) the size of Argentina. here again! Now you can enjoy i Century Club—today, years past, a great, stri bourbon pleasing to the tasf ~ . and easy on the pi as in aight te ... urse! . and rich, full flavor BTRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY * 86 PROOF * NATICNAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP, NEW YORK 1000 OO K “The Beauty Treatment jor Clothes” City Dry Cleaners For Prompt Servicc —Phone 877 i AR RainR R a s T T T ®

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