The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 10, 1949, Page 2

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¢ PAGE TWO 5 a FREEMAN Shoe (THE FOOTWEAR OF SUCCESSFUL MEN 'SCOTCH GRAIN $15.95 HEAVY-GAUGE"SAOLES Superb Scotch . . . its distinctive polished-pebble surface takes on added richness with every shine. Its quality is apparent in any sctting and in any weather. g. (/M. Bsé'tfncfi 80. QIALITY SINCE /887 LONDON and PARIS on your way to Scandinavia AT NO EXTRA TRANSPORTATION COST! Now you can make a real “tour” out of your trip to the homeland! For regular SAS fare to Scandi- navia, you may stop off at either London, Paris, or both cities. And on your trip back to the U. 8. A., the same privilege applies. ® THE ONLY DC-6 planes — modern, spacious, dependable—fastest to Scandinavia (just 17 hours from New York). ® DIRECT to such cities as Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki. ® FREE MEALS, smorgasbord and refreshments. ® NO TAX. .. no tipping .. . no charge for bag- gage up to 66 pounds. Plenty of seats availahle now! Nine flights every week provide the space you want, when you want it. By flying SAS, you spend more time in Scandinavia . . . fewer hours in travel ... less time away from home and job See Your Travel Agent or Northwest Airlines Westward Hotel, Anchorage Main 765 CANDINAVIAN AIRLINES SYSTEM ® Scattle: 824 White Bldg. SEneca 6250 Alaska Sales and Service Agency for HOBART | FRIEDRICH Refrigeration TANDY BROS. —— BILL Food Machinery | BOB Display Rom 296 S. Franklin—Box 511—Phone 971 A e e e e == === | bound flights carried three passeng- 'Miss Marie Doyan And CPR Officer Are Marrried Here ‘The marriage of Miss Marie An- | toinette Doyon and Mr. Henry | White was solemnized last evening |in the Catholic Church of the Na- tivity. The bride is the daughter of | Mr. ang Mrs. Henri Doyon of Mon- | treal, Quebec, and Mr. White, who is an officer acoard the Princess | | Kathleen, is from | Rev. Robert L. Whelan, 8.J., offi-| | ciated at the nuptials. | Miss Doyon wore a gown of white ininon fashioned with an off-the- shoulder neckline and a triple- tiered skirt. Her fingertip veil was caught to a coronet of white stock and she carried a bouquet of pink | roses and stephanotis. Capt. William O. Hughes, master of the Princess Kathleen, escorted the bride to the | altar. Miss Linda Musgrave was maid of honor and wore a gown of blue georgette. Mi Doreen Pablow, | bridesmaid, gowned in pale yellow ninon. The bride’s attend- ants wore matching wreaths of carnations in their hair and car- ried sprays of carnations. Mr. Wil- liam Warden, ship’s officer on the Kathleen, was best man. RECEPTION HELD 1 Over 80 guests attended the wedding reception which was held | |in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel. The wedding cake was baked in the shape of the Princess Nomr:l to commemorate the meeting of | the bridal couple. Miss Doyon met | her future husband aboard the Norah, on her trip to Alaska to be a nurse at St. Ann's Hospital. Mr. White will join his ship in Skagway to make the return voy- age, Mrs. White will leave Juneau |in September to join her huskand| {in Vancouver, B.C., where they will make their home. {Pacifit Northern Carries Eighteen Passengers Yesterday The Pacific | krought 13 pa - | cn yesterday's flights and on north- Northern Airlines | ssengers into Juneau ers to Anchorage and two to Cor- dova From Anchorage to Juneau: A. H. William, R. E. Marsh, George; | Swam, Earl Bright, Art Anderson, | Glen Anderson, Ralph Green, R. C.‘ Caldwell, Mrs. Ryan, E. G. Fish- er, Emma Browbridge, Leo Deven- ny. From Cordova: Mr. Rosswog. To Anchorage: Dr. H. C. Schum- acher, Mrs. H. C. Schumaclrer, | Maurice Kaufman., To Cordova: W. Barbet, G. Cun- {ningham. | LRt I | ;Bubonit Plague - |Breaks Out in i ‘New Mexico | | SANTA FE, NM, Aug. 10—®— Illness of two New Mexico resi- dents today was found to be Bu- bonic Plague—the “black death” of the Middle Ages. i Only 21 other cases of the disease !have Leen listed in the United ‘Stau‘s during the last 25 years. | The diagnosis was reported by | Dr. Vernon Link of the Western | Contagious Disease Control Center | M San Francisco. | He told a news conference that | modern drugs apparently have | Late today Stanford University vancouver, The | | semitic letter { paper, police said. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA HERBERTHOOVER (rash Vicim and OBSERVMG 15TH Fiancee Facing BIRTHDAY T0DAY TAKES KIWANIANS ON MEXICO TRIP {Financial Troubles i 10—M—His fi- SEATTLE, Aug. all over the world. wallet. | | luncheon meeting in Gold Room. The fiancee, Eleanor Mary Wilm- the Baranof /LEVIN TRAVELOGUE Fifteen Persons will honor its most illustrious ing, lost almost everything in the | ’ o ol g N graduate in the Forst Amphithe- | flames that consumed the fallen | t_A{;;‘" n@xl{ilnk.tcm[c i ."(;:”d'h“: atre a crowd of 12,000 to 14000 craft—all her money, clothing, [ them n Aiaskd, ~EVIR And Hs o 3 wife revisited countries “Below the was expected. jewelry Bord os e HHSA DINBEE taik The program will be climaxed by thing except two charred OIi‘?'v' o8 ‘; ,-” "‘ ! f,‘sts_ i_ & a major address by Mr. Hoover, be- checks, totaling $147, which Lud-| - _“‘f"}_“‘{“f_ el i b ! nt| brook found while probing through | PloYer Father Bernard Hubbard ginning at 6 p.m., (Pacific Day! Time). His topic will be “Think ot the Next Generation.” Even Mr. Hoover, who once said “I have had every honor to which any man can aspire,” probably was surprised by the stir created by had climbed and studied moeuntains in Alaska, leanic the ashes. volear Ludbrook had counted on those checks to help nurse his bride-to- be back to health. But today had $1 left it vivid that and his descriptfon of (This is the mounain when he |itself out in 1943, in the thy he iearned himself—that of a farmer who had to stop work is i an: a v » . his birthday niversary and by won't produce any money, at l when the ground beneath the ox- the congratulatory letters by the S i % for a long time to come. | ens became too hot to go on.) i b i [Tt in this region that Levi Two states, Arkansas and May-| «One check was made out to|,cia the influence of L land, proclaimed today “Hoover Miss Wilming by the Civil Aero-| ... in Mexico, just Day.” Governor Earl Warren of pautics Administration, the other| ..keq it at Nunivak Island. in California issued a proclamation in py apn insurance compa Lud-| 41 Bering Sea 3 which he said: “Few men any- prook said. “When I deposited | 5 where have lived more useful lives,| them in a Seattle bank I under-| and none with greater devotion, stood I'd be able to draw against|as th both at home and throughout the the acccunt. But now the bank His a it move@ with the head- world.” tells me I may have to wait three |long speed of a Mexican bus ride to ! months or a year before they are de » cosmopolitan cities and . " . | cleared.” picturesque countryside; bullNty German Poiice Fire | ; |and fronton games; churchgs, pyra- Are Former Partners mids, palaces, railroads, seaports On D.P. (mwd After | Ludbrook, 48, and Miss Wilming, | and food, as well as Ssilverwork, 46, formerly were partners in a| bakery al Kodiak, Alaska. They sold that a year ago and in recent weaving, pottery, needlework and other native craft: Levin is doing research at the Refusal o Disperse MUNICH, Germany, Aug. 10 ‘M‘Lhe CAA on Wpody Island, I\l‘LZI!A] —German police today fired into Kodiak. ! choosing as his main character one a crowd of 1,000 Jewish displaced| At the time of the accident, Miss|of the dogs he used on many ex- persons they said had stoned them Wilming was en route to visit his| peditions, and defied orders to disperse, | mother in Michigan and her moth-|" pyesident James MeClellan The police said three of the DP's|er in Indiana. She planned to re-!ynounced postponement of the d were wounded. turn to Alaska, where they were| iyt Kiwanis convention previous- The crowd, without obtaining | to be married this “fall. Ludbrook | a license for a meeting, had gath-|said. | the formation of a 35-member club ered to protest an alleged anti-| Ludbrook said he had given lm}m Palmer. in a Munich news-|fiancee nearly all of his savings| ygyry Parker introduced the only | when she left on the trip. When gyest at today’s meeting, Woodrow Munich, in the American occupa- |he was notified about the accident ‘! Hehsatline of Tepny: tion zone, was a Nazi stmnglmld‘hc had little money left. He bor-, b3 Lefore the war. Hitler staged his|rowed from friends and rushed to first, unsuccessful beer hall putsch her bedside. here in 1922, “I wasn’t worried about m — as long as she was getting well With a full rc | he said. “When it ran out there|aboard, the Prin (°'boy Salesman | that doesn't do me any good. Wi m. The s iled for was that $147. But now, I find,|rived in port yesterday Starts Another leven had to let her special nurse|last evening at 11 oiock “through a d s KATHLEEN IN PORT blew | backyard | months operated a restaurant for!ajaska Museum for a book about! B . eyet an-| ly scheduled for this week-end, also | so his inter-| est in Paracutin was exceptional,| o he and “two or three” passengers fgot out the front door. The other survivors escaped through a rear i | Levin’s informal talk was as vivid | Window "which a passenger kicked rich colors of the tropics|Oub. | “walked through fiv | | | | |Bus Tragedy WEDNESDAY‘ AUGUST 10, 194ad :FIRST CHILD BORN Are Killed in and Mrs. Ernest Inman. (P-—Fifteen persons died in the|St. Ann's Hospital STANFORD UNIVERSITY, ancee lay in Providence Ifo-‘jl"'-‘“ Ed Levin, geclogist, guide, travel-| flaming wreckage of a Greyhound| Grandparents sharing congrat: Calif., Aug. 10—(P—Herbert Clark today recovering from injuries she A . 0 TR ey o i f « s Hoover is 75 years old 1d | suffered in the crash of airliner | &% €x-fiction writer—and dynamic | us that burned after smashing lations are Mrs. Mary Little | Hoo s years today, and|suffered in the of an altliner |, 4 rer_gave Juneau Kiwanians a!into a bridge abutment near herc|Vancouver, B. C., and Mr. a | tributes for the country’s onlv during takedff July. 19 and Harry . Enbint, i . iearly today. | Mrs. o 1 :lxvlng ex-President poured in from | Ludbrook had only $1 left in his whirl d trip through Mexico and Y. |Mrs. J. M. Inman, who live 4 a dash into Guatelmala at today’s McCleary, Wash. The bus, bound from Indianapolis to Bloomington, hit the bridge on a winding, hilly road shortly after midnight. Seconds later it was in flames. ‘The bodies removed were brought to the Indiana National Guard armory here to await identifica- tion, Driver Wayne Cramer of Indi- anapolis, one of the survivors, said front tire may have blown out, ausing him to lose control of the us. After striking the abutment it kidded 150 feet down the winding highway and came to rest on its left side, blocking the emergency | door. Flames enveloped the vehicle| almost immediately. The driv aid | Glen Van Horn, manager of radio station WTTS in Bloomington, said one of the survivors told him he feet of flames” to get off the bus. Fhe survivor, Wells Richardson, 18, of Evansville, Ind., told Van Horn he was dozing when the bus struck the bridge abutment. Van Horn said Edgar Davis of Indianapolis, a Negro, was credited by other survivors with kicking out a rear window, through which most of the survivors escaped. Davi suffered a bhack injury and was brought to the Bloomington hos- pital, | THE ONLY GENUINE TO ERNEST INMAN Stephen Verle is the name cho | en for their first-born by ACS Sg Their so "weigmng eight pounds, five ounce BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Aug. 10— was born early Tuesday morning FRISKO JEENS CASLERS MENS WEAR [ Plumbing ® Heafing 0il Burners Telephone-319 Nights-Red 730 Harri Machine Shep, Inc. * M |80 because we can't pay her—and |Kathleen will not stop in Juneau Trip Around Globe we owe the nurse more than $200.”|on the southbound trip. LONDON, Aug. 10—(#—Ex-cowboy Sam Keener is back again for the fifty-fourth time—fully ‘equip- ped down to a revolver and cart- ridge belt for ‘“protection in rough country.” | The 61-year-old millionaire presi- dent of the Salem (Ohio) Engi- neering Company flew in last night on the first leg of a round-the-| world sales trip. | White-haired Keener (“Just call| me Sam”) stepped off his special | plane with a badge under his coat | and four gold bars on his sleeve.! Each bar represents 100,000 miles of flying. His plane carries one and a half tons of food, 20,000 cigarets and —a large carved wooden horse | bolted to the floor and complete with saddle. The horse was presented to him in America as a memento of his early cowboy days. | “Iestill love riding,” Sam said. | | | “Ford Model F-6 for 1949 with standard stake body. Available in 9 ft. and 12 ft. lengths. Up to T\ 5,500 Ibs G.V.W. CHICAGO VISITOR P. M. Armstrong of Chicago, is/! registered at the Baranof Hotel. | - [ FROM FIRST CITY achieved a smashing victory over the ancient, flea-borne disease. Treatment, he said, has brought dramatic ' improvement in both | cases, ‘The victims are a 10-year-old boy treated at Taos and a 37-year-old |man in the Veterans Hospital at Charles M. Marler of Ketchikan | is staying at the Baranof Hotel. | American glassmaking wazs revoJ lutionized by a carpenter of Sand- | wich, Massachusetts, who found in (1827 that glass could be hand- {pressed in a mould. This brought jglassware for the first time with- in the reach of every American Albuquerque, | FROM INDIANA | Mr. and Mrs. DeArmond and Elizabeth Morningstar from An- | derson, Indiana, are registered at the Baranof Hotel. ! home. Alaska Coastal Alrfines spot on the globel And block of seats so that its ALASK —through your local ticket agent—your passage 1o the States on Pan American, and then to any in Sitka, Hoonah, Tenakee, Skagway, Haines and similar communities, priority with those who buy tickess in Juneaul We have yet to see the load that Ford Trucks can’t pull! Whatever you haul, wherever you haul it, we've got the right kind of truck for your work. The 1949 Fords truck everything! As a matter of fact, we have yet to see the loading dock that has strained to a load that Ford Trucks can’t pull. Here’s why Ford Trucks haul everything: first because each Ford is Bonus Built with extra strength to give it a wider work range. Second, we give you a choice of over 139 different Ford Truck models for 1949: enables you fo arrange for you who buy tickets ACA reserves a special passengers share equal “ @ 'S 152 South Main Fords haul EVERYTHING... including the Kitchen sink These, multiplied by scores of chassis options, give a job coverage practically without limit. Come in and get the facts from us on wide Ford job cover- age. Check on the scores of exclusive Ford Truck features available in no other truck built! — 1l ed Allen Show, Sunday Evenings—NBC Networks 1o listen to the Fre wfss i ion. ler invites you b ol Listen to the Ford Theater, Friday Even| See your pewspaper for time af BUILT STRONGER 7O LAST LONGER USING LATEST REGISTRATION DATA ON 5,444,000 TRUCKS,) LIFE INSURANCE EXPERTS PROVE FORD TRUCKS LAST MJ‘ JUNEAU MOTOR CO. Phone 30 TRUCKS i FOOD SALE { J/ 9 e i i By Lutheran Ladies Aid on Fri- e . ] Y 1 day, August 12, begining 10:30 A.M. 4 ; . % at Sears Order Office. 69 2t r n ‘

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