The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 3, 1949, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT, © BANKERS SING 'DAYS OF GOLD’ BUT VOTE TOKEEP IT$35 ANOZ. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 3.—(P— Gold—magic word in this historic city made famous by gold seekers in '49—held sway at the Ameri- can Bankers Association convention yesterday From the opening song—Days of CONDITIONS OF WEATHER ' ALASKAPTS. Weather conditions and temper- atures at various Alaska points, also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 am., 120th Meridian Time, and 3 released by to the final address, at-| t Juneau, tention focused on the yellow met- | Anchorage al and its problems. iBarmw Florence Quarteraro, San Fran-|3ethel cisco’s Metropolitan opera star, led | Cordova the closing session in the song u!‘Dflwmn gold. | Edmonton Mallan Sproul, President of the|pPairbanks New York Federal Reserve Bank,| Haines carried the theme in a scholarly | Havre X review of the entire gold qustion|Juneau Airport —convertibility, price and a free|Annette Island market, Kodiak .. The convention kept pace, adopt- | Kotzebue ing a resolution to continue the|McGrath price of gold at $35 an ounce, as | Nome advocated by the Secretary of the | Northway | Petersburg Treasury Portland follow: 24--Cloudy 23—Partly Cloudy 37—Rain Showers 26—Cloudy 35—Clear 24—Cloudy 40—Rain 36—Clear 51—Rain ... 50-—Fog 33—Partly Cioudy 18—Snow o—s 19—Snow .. 17—Partly Cloudy 17—Partly Cloudy 52—Rain Showers 32—Clear 42—Fog 44—Cloudy 37 Partly Cloudy g the Weather Bureau|for several activities. A food sale, 34—Rain Showers | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA LEGION AUXILIARY T0 HAVE FOOD SALE November, “Membership Month” for the American Legion Auxil- |lary was the talk at the regular meeting of Juneau Unit No. 4, held Tuesday night in the Legion Dugout, and was well attended, due |in part to the efforts of the mem- bership committee, Mary Jean Per- kins and Marilyn Dapcevich. With Mrs. Chester Zenger, Pre- | sident, presiding, plans were made KIDNAPED GIRL I: RETURNED HOME; IS NOT HARMED MULLINS, S.C., Nov. 3—P—A seven-year-old blond girl, taken off yesterday in a car by two strange men, showed up at an old farm house today, tired but unharmed. Deputy Sheriff Burt Rogers said Jerome Alford, 30, and Hugh Smith, 22, both farmers, had been arrested. They were locked in an undisclosed jail. “I understand from the doctors that those fellows didn't bother her,” the officer said. “They’d been drinking,” he said| of Alford and Smith. ‘V Rogers said the men had driven| about the greater part of the night with the child, but had let her out near the home of George Rogers. The home is about 15 miles from the roadside where little Mary Spivey was lured into the car yes- terday afternoon as she stepped; from a school bus. | CHRONIC DISEASE PROGRAM BEGUN BY HEALTH DEPT. Beds and equipment were being‘ installed this week in St. Ann's| hospital for inauguration of the| be David Hanson, who has been Alaska Health Department pro-| missing for a month, was found |€ram for diagnosis and treatment| ,of children’s chronic diseases, in- today at Angoon. | Joseph M. Kahklen, Alaska Na- | cluding rheumatic fever. The pro-, !gram is under the direction of Dr.| tive Service principle teacher at 5 b Angoon reported this from the | Virginia Cobb, pediatric consultant fishing vessel Admiralty at Angoon | for the department. i this morning. There will be beds for seven child- He asked permission to bury the ! ren. Hospitalization = is to begin body immediately. U. S. Commis- November 21 for patients in the sioner Gordon Gray gave pe,mxs_’pmgram which, Health Department sion, for immediate burial after | authorities point out, is on a dem-| examination for wounds or in-|onstration basis at its inception. | dication of fou] play. The program offers ovservation, | complete diagnosis and long-time care as a service to doctors of the Territory for their child patients, who are suffering from a chronic Chamber of the City Hall. disease for which their parents The meeting, which will begin could not otherwise afford the/ |featuring, of course, home-made cakes, pies, cookies and perhaps |rolls and bread, will be held Thurs- |day, November 10 in the Sears Roebuck office on Seward Street. |Mrs. Al Zenger, Sr., is chairman ;0{ the committee in charge. | Several more articles have been donated for the Gift Box which is I being filled for a Veterans Hospital | Gift Box, according to Mrs. Agnes Kiefer, who is in charge of this | project. The Auxiliary has for |many years sponsored a Christmas |Gift Box in Veterans Hospitals, | | where hospitalized veterans can |make their selections of gifts for their families, free of charge. The Auxiliary also takes care of gift wrapping, mailing, etc., for the veterans. The social 15, will feature members. BODY OF HANSON FOUND AT ANGOON The body of a man, believed to November new meeting, initiation of COUNCIL MEETING Juneau's City Council will meet tomorrow night in the Councll at' 8 p.m., will consider committee necessary lengthy treatment. reports. If diagnosis indicates that treat- —_— ment and long-term care will im- DIVORCE SUIT FILED prove the child’s condition, the Guthrie B. Lingle Jr. has filed program provides that he may re-| suit for divorce against Dolores main hospitalized until benetited Helen Lingle. The suit was filed thereby. in the United States District Court.| Dr. Cobb said that initiation ot —— the program now was made possible | DIVORCE SUIT FILED with the interested aid and co- Edith R. Bigelow filed suit today | operation of St. Ann’s hospital, and for divorce from Courtland C. Bige- | the arrival of trained personnel. low in the United States District| Miss Sarah Sinclair is to wbe! Sproul hit hard at a “free mar- ket” in gold sought by miners and‘prmce George others wanting a higher price for|Seattle the metal. He said it wow€ be &, Whitehorse “witless proceeding matched only|yakutat ... by our bonanza provisions for the| SRR it special benefit of the miners of | PNA BRINGS IN 11 Increa the price of gold,| [] ‘ Sproul said, would have these two| TAKES Iwo wESI major results: 1. It would provide gold-produc-| mpirteen- persons were carried ing countries and those with size- yesterday by Pacific Northern Air- able gold reserves or private hoards lines the company brought 11 in with additional windfall dollars!e. o the westward, and took two with which to huy American goods.|gue " rhey were: 2, It would provide the busis for| g ‘Anchorage—Dorothy Nov- an expansion of credit in the Uni-| ¢aneu gack Hendrickson, W. C. ted States “which might be highly |ovnold Sue Greif, L. Woodward, | inflationary.” Harold Foster, Dr. Codington, Wm. Other resolutions adopted favor-|prance | ed continuation of the Foreign Aid| p.om Cordova—Elmer Harris. Program, supported the Treasury’s| mnom vYakutat—A. C. Emmett, savings bond program, urged bal-ij‘ Featherstone. ancing of the federal budget bYlneq 4g the company brought 11 in economy and without increasing| 1, yakutat—Carl Schlightig. taxes and called for preservation o, anchorage—A. J. Altar. of the American way of life. | DAN WILIS SAFE pA“ AM FOR HFI'H | SEARCHERS LEARN | Yesterday believed to be lost, to- | |day Dan Willis was reported safe | MONTH GoB OVER ‘by members of the Coast Guard ¥ party aboard the cutter 52013 which | Halr MILL'O" lBS !wenl to search for him. | ® | Willis’ boat was located in Farra- |gut Bay, with his son aboard. Young SEATTLE, Nov. 3.—(®—For lhe‘WflHs said his father had gone to fifth consecutive such month, Pan a farm about two miles upstream. American World Airways reported| Mrs. Willis had reported the fafl- today more than half a million ure of her husband to return to a pounds of clipper cargo between|camping spot at 12 Mile, across Seattle and Alaska cities in Oct-iFrederlck Sound from Thomas Bay ober. in the Petersburg vicinity. Traffic Supt. E. E. McMorran said | ——— cargo volume was slightly below | high points reached during the summer months, but the downward winter trend was “not. as pro- nounced as had been anticipated.”| Northkound “ cargo out of Seattle totalled 464,078 pounds and south- bound volume into Seattle totalled 54,903 pounds. Sizzh'ng ! on skewers and W. J. WAGNER HERE ENROUTE TO SITKA| William J. Wagner, owner of the | Alaska Broadcasting Company, was in Juneau over night before going to Sitka. While here, he conferred with John Ashbaugh, manager of Sta- tion KINY. His trip to Sitka con- | cerns the new station in his com- | pany, KIFW, now being organized. | Although Wagner arrived here yesterday, he was two days on the | way from Seattle, weather not per- ! mitting - an earlier landing here, but necessitating several unsched- uled stops including Whitehorse. flavorfyl on a famous PRINCESS STEAMER For unexcelled accommodation, fine food, courteous service and athoroughe ly luxurious trip, travel South by one of the ever-popular Princess ships, SKEWERED BEE 114 Ibs. top round or sirloin 14 cup French dressing 1 onl Special Round Trip Winter Bacon Mushroom caps Here’s a hearty invitation for real enjoyment . . . in steaming, fragrant cups of Hills Bros. Coffee. This de- liciously uniform coffee is blended from the pick of the world’s coffee crops . ..and “Controlled Roasting,” an exclusive Hills Bros. process, roasts the blend a little at a time— continuously—for flavor that never varies. Hills Bros. Coffee is vacuum- packed, for freshness. | pediatric nurse for the unit. F |is a visitor at the Baranof Hotel: HELENA GUEST MOOSE WOMEN T0 ' Won't Give Up of the Women of the Moose this| ing. The following reports will be|, MANILA Nov. i e Wadgalls; | ¢ oarms carried by his bodyguards service, Margaret Woodford. President Elpidio Guierino ban- word will be given to members in| g o e. 90! |a permit to carry a weapon “for is stopping at the Baranof Hotel LA rmow axcuonace JNITED EUROPE ON | MEET AT 8 TONIGHT . f iz Firearms from - There will be a regular meeting | pre.eledion Da s evening at 8 o'clock with Mrs.| . y Edna Card, Senior Regent presid- § | tial candidate Jose P. Laruel today made: home-making, Barbara Mill; | 1 membership, Georgia | balked at turning over personal Mooseheart alumni, Bid Peterson; tod i ' | during the last week of the feverish publlatey, -Musnigos MUEpEY & s"cmlnatlannl election campaign. All members should take receipts Ined the carrying of weapons ex- for dues as the new quarterly pfiss,m,pt by police from November 1 to sood shandifig ‘his jeypoing] | ~ Laurel said he had been granted | my protection,” He refused to give W. A. Carson ‘of Helena, Mont,, it up. It is a submachine gun. Jack P. Hendrickson of Anchor- age is stopping at the Baranof Ho- | pATH Io REA['IY tel. | YAKIMA GUEST ! Maxie O'Brien of Yakima, Wash.. (By the Associated Press) The problem of uniting Western Europe is being considered today — — by Foreign Ministers of 12 nations. FROM SEATTLE The twelve, members of the guid- Mrs. Alberta E. Rau of Seattle |ing ministerial committee of the is registered at the Baranof Hotel.!Council of Europe, are meeting in —_— | Paris. FROM PETERSBURG 1 They are considering resolutions Clarence Walters of Petersburg | passed by the Council’s'’ Consulta- is a guest at the Baranof Hotel.|tive Assembly, which met at Strass- — bourg in September. These called The nation’s largest Indian pag- | for a European *Economic Union eant is staged every August in|with preferentidl trade links. Gallup, N. M. Paul G. Hoffman, Marshall Plan Tanan THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1949 | administrator, eaflier this week yesterday when the General Coun- called for economic integration of | cil of the European Economic Co- Western Europe. The only way to operation Organization (OEEC) lasting prosperity, Hoffman said.lagreed to eliminate national quota lies in the creation of a single restrictions on 50 percent of the European market. | international commerce of Marshall Progress along this line was made Plan countries. TNRTREANRERERNARERES AR ERACARRRRARNRY CTTTITT I T rprTreT NOW — NEW — LOW — FARE from . JUNEAU Yakutat $30.00 Cordova$ 53.50 Homer $87.00 Kodiak $105.00 109 Reduction on Round Trip *Plus Tax Daily Scheduled Flighis Anchorage — Cordova — Kodiak Homer — Yakutat Connections at Anchorage for all Interior and Westward Points Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 T8EEIRINEN: STENREEZRANENTAIRSNINNNINY; e B2ZINABRESREREE FELTITTIT SBEEEEEEEEEESNINIRERSERNNEIEIENIRRRANAELE California Grocery and Heat Market T v B— ——— THE PURE FOODS STORE Friday =====-= Saturday --- ORDER YOUR - Honday THANKSGIVING TURKEYS NOW! - CRISCO 3 1b. Can 89 PUREX Gallons 65« TOMATO SOUP 2 for 25¢ PITTED DATES 2 for 55c SWANSDOWN - - - 2for 95 Pillsbury FLOUR .- . . 10pounds93c BOOK MATCHES - - - 19 Tree Top, quarts ROYAL PUDDING 3for25¢ APPLE SAUC 2 for 43¢ NIBLETS CORN - - Zfor 53 " Snowfiake, 2 1b. box 1 CRACKERS - KLEENEX 300 Count 29 LARGE DISPLAY of FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLES - Endive, Carrots, Broccoli, Cauliflower, Lettuce, Celery, Cucumbers, Avocados, Green Peppers, Tomatoes, Grapes, Danish Squash, Pears, Apples, Oranges, Coconuts WESSONOIL - - - Van Camps, No. 2% Can : PORK and BEANS - Reliance, No. 2 Excursion Fares Now in Effect. $108.80 from Juneau. Juneau Sailings SOUTHBOUND Sunday, November 6 Friday, November 18 Tuesday, November 29 For information and reservations contact WM. FEERO, JR., Agent Baranof Hotel S ——————————— For 6 servings, cut 14 pounds top round or sirloin steak into 1-inch cubes. Cover cubes and mushroom caps with }{ cup French dressing and add 1 sliced onion. Let stand 1 hour or more and drain. Arrange alternate pieces of beef, squares of bacon, and mushrooms on skewers and barbe- cue or cook under broiler about 8 minutes, turning occasionally. Serve each portion of skewered meat on slice of toast which has been brushed with French dressing. Serve with Hills Bros. Coffee r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ] ] Trademarks Reg. U.S. Pat. O, Copyright 1949 —Hills Bios. Coftes, Inc. | 1 L - o JWO: GRINDS: ¥ Regular Grind + Drlj p and Giass-Maker Grind ORANGE JUICE - - 2for 43c PORK ROAST - - - Ssclh. SHORT RIBS - - - - 3lbh. For Meats PII_0NE 371 APPLE JUICE . . . 2ford%c GROUND BEEF - §5¢ 1b. CORNED BEEF . . . Ticlbh. FREE DELIVERY On Orders of $2.50 or More 3 \ For Groceries PHONE 478

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