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PAGE TWO and meetings mple troop eral s for study of the method recom-| mended for Scout use as boy lead-| ers in @ troop plan their own pro-| SAYS SCHULTZ gram. one day training hikes of patrols; and troops and the and Troop Hiking” will be used to JSC Manager Gives His Picture—Chamber Wel- N Camping, tonight's subject, will comes c G 0”|(ia|s { complete the Scoutmasters’ course which started last weekend at Eagl BT River camp and has continued in No plans for rebuilding. the Ju-| je® o e " Gk ‘ neau Spruce Corp. lumber mill have | .y " oirce is being conducted in been made, Freeman Schultz, mli the basement of the Methodist manager, said today, speaking brief- | 4o "o g Bt 790 o0 ol ly before the Juneau Chamber of | .o jeader is Boy Scout fiel Commerce meeting at the Baranof| . .. iive Russ Apple, of Fairbank hotel. = “We are not ready to call in the undertaker yet,” he said, “but it k7] ments.” | Schultz said the insurance ad- AS TOURIST SPOT justers would be here tomorrow toj investigate the ruins of the mill| which was destroyed in a spectac- ular blaze early Monday murnln;:.]HR””“-‘“‘ irom a tour of the “Even if a decision to rebuild 1s; Taku River area yesterday, Ken- reached, it is certain that no lum-|neth Kadow, chairman of the ber.could be produced at the mill Alaska Field Committee, Col. John until the middle of 1951, he said lR Noy Commissioner of Roads “The planning stage would take at | for Alaska, and Fred Dunn, Pan least six months and a year would |American Airways official agreed be necessary to reconstruct the|that the Taku Valley has “tre- min” ‘:ncndous possibilities” as a tourist “This is @ Litle rough,” he said,| “{E8etion “but it is better to face the issue.| 6e ‘paity flew lrom-Junesy to There will be little employment at | Tok Lodge via stskn Vi the JSC. All lumber will be ship- | o i S8iSout. hosts Will be taker Safith | T Dy boat 1o- wishiniys mUS Shidadt water arbors dtiicnip- |00/ the \Britlsh Columbia-Alaska pliés will also be shipped south. [""""" “No decision has been made re-| They also visica the Twin Gla- garding operation of the retail yard | clers where there is a likely spot in Juneau, but yards in Anchorage for a summer ski center. “We visited these areas to and from there went look and Fairbanks will remain open,”| he added. ‘uvcr their possibil: see if they could be developed as an economic With all but two members of whele,” Col. Noyes s rty was Mrs. daughter, the Chamber’s board of directors| Accompanying the p out of town, Second Vice President|gadow, Mrs. Dunn and Henry Green took over as chairman | pynn, and Mrs. No, of the session, and board member | st O. F. Benecke sat in as secretary., Welcome Coast Guard i Capt. N. S. Haugen, Chief of | Staff, for the 17th District Coast | Guard headquarters and Comdr. D. M. Morrisen, strict Engineer Officer, were introduced to Cham- ber of Commerce members by Lt. Comdr. Edward P. Chester. For Chief of Staff Capt. Haugen, Juneau is no new territory. He left here 19 years ago after serving on the old Unalga in Alaskan waters. For the past two years he has been base commander at Ketchikan. Must Have Housing “Only one thing is troubling us now,” Capt. Haughen said, “and that is sufficent, adequate and' proper housing ‘for the personnel.” | 9t is obvious that a lot of work Juneau, Alaska, announces the In- hag been done, but there will hm,e;\'itahnn to Bid for furnishing one tobe more,” he said. “Our person- | (1) station wagon or suburban type nel is now housed in hotels, but|¢ar f.o.b. Seward, Alaska, less trade- it is obvious also that this situa- | allowance on four (4) used cs tion cannot be maintained. y “It is a serious matter for your 203, Territorial Building, Juneau, community,” he said. “The Admir- |Alaska, for bid forms and specifica- al is exacting and wishes to .,(.‘tions, quite sure that the staff has hous-| Sealed bids will be reccived at the ing before cpening the district|above address until 4:00 p.m. Sep- office.” tember 2, 1949. Guests at the meeting included | First publication, Aug. 18, 1949. Bob Atwood, Anchorage publisher; |Last publication, Sept. 1, 1949. C. M. Latimer, vice-president of the | F"-—; > — First National Bank of Seattle, and | Robert Scott. SCOUTMASTERS SEE FILM ON MEETINGS A complete troop meeting was shown in a sound motion picture | Tuesday night to members of thef| Scoutmaster training course and | was analyzed by the course mem- bers as part of the session, said Curtis Shattuck, Boy Scout district chairman. The trainees OTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned was, on the 16th day of August, 1949, duly ap- pointed administrator of the estate of \ULYSSES S. GREGORY, De- ceased, and that Letters Testament- ary therefor on said day were duly issued to the undersigned. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to present the same, with proper vouch- ers, and duly verified, within six (6) months from the date of this No- tice, to the undersigned in his of- fice'at Room 200, Seward Building, Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, 16th day of August, 1949. 7 M. E. MONAGLE, Administrator. First publication, Aug. 18, 1949. Last publication, Sept. 8, 1949. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned was, on the 1 day of August, 1949, duly ap- ted Administratrix of the es- tage of Seht Ceylon Anderson, de- GAMES TODAY BROOKLYN, Sept. 1—#— The | Brocklyn Dodg moved within one | game of the league-leading { Louis Cardinals today as they ibed out an 11-8 victory over the | Cincinnati Reds in the first game lof a day-night doudleheader. | s OTHER {In the Naticnal League, | dropped one to Boston, 4 to 8; and | Pittsburgh bowed to New York INVITATION TO BID The Alaska Department of Health, beginnin sev- also planned Three-Ev this fi ; persons having claims against { the estate of deceased are required to present the same, with proper vauchers attached,to the undersigned at Juneau, Alaska, within six months from the date of this notice, at thg office of Joseph A. McLean, At- %d this 16th day of August, 1949. SOUTHBOUND S.S. Aleutian | S.S. Baranof September 4 September 11 for PEGGY D. E. McIVER, Administratrix of the estate of ¢ Seht Ceylon Anderson, de- First publication, Aug. 18, 1949. &ast publication, Sept. 8, 1949. | e hiking skills and meth- | J up the | club- Chicago H s. | missioner of Labor, was a passeng- | | Interested bidders may call at Room | ALASKA CHAMPIONSHIP OUTBOARD RACES at Petersburg ! MONDAY - SEPTEMBER 5 hours & hours of Racing Thrills SMORGASBORD DINNER VICTORY DANCE $4.75 ——————————————————————————————— ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY PASSENGER SAILING SCHEDULE ALSO FREQUENT FREIGHTER SERVICE H. E. GREEN, Agent — Phone 2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 1,500 STUDENTS IN FALL TERM | AFFAIR AT | pyan estiMaTes Pre-enroliment estimates indicate an increase of 1500 students for Alaska’s schools this fall. Enrcllment for the school year| beginning September 6 may be as high as 13,000, according to figure: revealed by Dr. James C. Ryan, Territorial Commissioner of Edu- cation. | Alaska Cham-[)?onship Out- board Event Scheduled Monday, Labor Day A big Alaska championship event is scheduled at Petersburg, that | hustling city on Wrangell Narrows, jon Monday (Labor Day), September 5 I Tt is called the championship for !:.utl;unrd races and according to ad-! received by the Empire from This includes both rural and dis- | trict schools. | Five new schools are scheduled to open in unincorporated districts, Dr. Ryan said. There will be one {in Girdwood on the Alaska Rail- road near Whittier Cut-off; at Tka- tan near False Pass; at Indepen-| . it be dence Mine, which is near Wasilla; ‘u:k Zimmerman, new editor °t|and at the CAA Airfield at Yaku- the Petersburg Press, entries aref,... tpected from all parts of Alaska. | [ It is the first Alaska champion-| TWO new incorporated school dis- |ship outkoara - races: and is: pri- | tricts “have ‘been added: Palmef, ‘marily sponsored by the Petersburg incorporated July 1,.and Yakutat, incorporated earlier in the year. vices | Junior Chamber of Commerce. ;‘ Prizes of various kinds in the; A new service has been added ! programmed events are to be through. the Bayview school near i | Seward, Dr. Ryan said. A speciall be a smorgashord dinner and Vic-|teacher, included in the number | | tory tlmt_%- i.assigned to Bayview, will teach the| A('cnr(h‘nu to ndvu-.es received b?’ichildren at Seward Sanatorium. the Empire, Ben Smith, Union Oil; Bayview is for students at the Company representative at Peters- | josce Lee Home. burg, has anncunced his company | Wil turleh Theakdunaliniaitortiis 1 o Ot CL i Alial Of B8 Sutey st oaie) th 5 | | outboard racers, a total of 5 ga]-:T:::e a;:e ?.?710 ""Sem"m 5?‘:"0‘& |lons to” be donated. one-room schooi Great plans are being made at | Petersburg for the event and boat {racers and other visitors are as-| sured of proper housing while there. | Five hours of racing besides the| dinner and dance are on the score cards, i | awarded winners and there will also {NO STORY HOUR AT ’ THE PUBLIC LIBRARY j There will be no story hour to-| morrow morning at the Public Li- ! brary because Mrs. Edna Lomen s, out of town. Announcement wul‘i | be made on her return as to when the story hour will ke resumed. NNELLY TO ADAK { Thomas Connelly plans m" on the Baranof Tuesday— ward, that is. The A.CS.-er is| telling friends to write him at his | | luxurious new quarters at the Adak: y Country Club. Connelly’s eight- !mnnth tour of duty “out there” ' will be in operations, as it has been {at the Juneau station, where he | has been for eight months. He came here from his home in Kan- as City, Mo., via Fort Knox, Ky, and Seattle. Pfc. ail | Henry Benson, Territorial Com- er on yesterday's Alaska Coastal | Airlines flight to Sitka. There he will speak at the Second Annual Education Conference of the A,N.S. Mount Edgecumbe School. Gas travels through natural gas pipelines from 10 to 20 miles an hour. g at noon ent Ticket S.S. Baranof September 6 | Seward R n incorporated and Pelican. Clark’s Point. e There will be 546 teachers to in-l Trouble comes in threes! struct at the schools Two rural schools, at Elfin Cove | a stateside @nd Vank Island, will not open tm.k; er 80 the e could carry his year. mpire paper route on Douglas Honored Guesls ——— T e ‘\I",m ¥ | From the minute your clothes [0 0000 o o o e He broke an : and had to s G AR G Y y 3 REP! | get a substitute carrier. Now he’ I : ,:‘ "{;,'}x.:\llin l‘tu((;‘.li:y \‘m ;n ,";“, '“, i = { safely home again they are AR i ot T TN treated with the care and re- e (This data is for 24-hour pe- | Doug’s dog, her name is “Whis- Jotesy el P e riod ending 7:30 am. PST.) e |kers” wiggles all over when spok-| one would give a gues e In Juneau—Maximum, 58; ®|en to. | of honor. They come back spot- o minimum, 51 Will anyone who sees a little| lessly clean and immaculately e At Airport—Maximum, 59; light brown and black dog with | pressed. e minimum 49 | white spots please return her to| . FORECAST G | . (Juneau and Vicinity) No one wants that t i trouble | e Cloudy with intermittent to come. rain tonight and Frida Oh, yes, his phone number & For better Low tonight near 51, S | Appearance ay around 58. Scutheasterly o winds occasionally 15 to 25 miles per hour. e PRE IPITATION @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today FUNERAL RITES FOR ®e000®0es 2000000000 e In Junedu — .31 inches;*® : DHL 7 Funeral services for James A. o Since July 1, 11.32 inches. 3 5 : Loyd, 44, locel painter who was e At Airport — 38 inches; found dead in his rcom here Au- . July 1, 749 inches, X 2 3 LS e e At 3% gust will be held tomorrow { morn t the jlic Church at | 18 o'clock. MRS. BEZ AND NICK, JR., i ARE GUESTS AT BARANOF | i act as pal Mrs. Nick Bez and Nick, Jr., are guests at the Baranof Hotel, plar for searers a vete . Whelan who was The R ning to be there until Sunday.|service They arrived on the Aleutian. Bez, Survivors include two daughters, Sr., is dividing his time during|Norma and Phyllis of Windsor, the fishing seascn, between Juneau Calif and Todd, where his company has Interment will be in Evergreen " Cemete a cannery. SICKS’ SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Gary Hanson stayed home from n with his par- JAMES LOYD, SAL Members of the American Legion | Loyd | an of World War I. | will -conduct the | THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1949 The Triangle Cleaners CALL Not heavy—not bitter, but light, sparkling and smooth, that’s Sicks® Select. It’s Beer in the Modern Manner— cheery, zestful, refreshing. Enjoy a glassand it’s Sicks’ Select from then on. SEATTLE, U.S.A. Unit of one of the Worlds Great Brewing Organizations * P