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PAGR TWO FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1949 100% All Wool BLANKET gins interested in % Just Received Them Directly from Cannon Mills In Solid Colors . . . 72%90" - 4" Rayon-Satin Binding - Weight 3%4 Pounds - Treated fo resist Moth Damage - With each Blanket is a Plastic Bag to store them in — Spedially priced at §$1 1.50 We Only Have a Limited Number B. d/l/(. ,Bzfzsncfi ea QUALITY SINCE /88T geo- | fees are charged for this| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PNA PURCHASES |Feero Newlyweds [FORMER JUNEAU ToLive i PUBLISHES TO OPENMODAY | REEVE ALEUTIAN | ToliveinJuneau | MAN ‘ | MS| FOR FOUR WEEKS AIRWAYS, REPORT| After Honeymaon BOOK OF POEMS The first class of the Mining F,x-g SEATTLE, Nov P—Pacific| More than 150 friends wished| “Thirty years as & publisher tentsion Course will be held in the |Northern Airlines, Inc, announced [happiness to a popular Juneau should have taught me vm Ieait one ! [study hall, Monday night, Juneau |today the purchase of Reeve Al-|couple at the wedding reception lesson: that !:netry—hk(‘ crime— |High School, beginning at 7 o'clock. |eutian Airways, subject to Civil| Thangsgiving Eve, and many of |does not pay” Thus Herman P The first part of this class will be |Aeronautics Board approval. them planned to shower the bride Dean of standard Publications be- taken up with registration for “,(.‘ two and bridegroom with confetti at the his biographical introductions | course, i As mentioned in an earlier issue of the Empire, the course will con- tinue for four weeks, with classes| |on five nights each week, Monday | | through Friday, between 7 and 10 p. ! It is planned to hold all the| ses in the High School, though | the rooms may change during the course. The Mining Extension Course is| |a function of the University of Al-| |aska, and is taught throughout the | | Territory by members of the Uni- | | versity faculty. It is designed to |give clementary knowledge in geo- logy, minerology, mining to anyone {those subjects A lecture on mining law w¥l be given and another on radioactive minerals, both of which should be of widespread interest. In conjunc- |tion with the latter, a geiger counter iwill be demonstrated 3 | Methods of prospecting and min- {ing, both placer and lode, will be covered, gnd an excellent film on |1arge scale placer mining as prac- |ticed in the Interior will be shown | The work in minerology will con- | sist of lectures and laboratory work 'designed to create familiarity with minerals of known or likely occur- rence in the Territory. Fundamentals of ph; al logy will be covered which are ap- | plicable to the problems of the prospector. These geologic principles awe of prime importance in the | search for minerals as well as in the development of mines. A study | of ore forming processes will be in- | cluded. : No curse The former with the taught by a| associated | Exploration | of course will be Juneauite now Fairbanks James A. Williams { : % ! | : 4 i | i : ! : z 3 § 1 z nks. Williams came here from Col- ifax, Wash., in 1939 to work in the | A-J Mine. He served in the i eutians during the and later | resumed his college studies in Falr- | anks. He was uated in mining | ngineering spring from the | THANKSGIVING DAY TRAGEDY PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 25 A twelve-year-old girl in a state |near exhaustion was found Thanks- igivmg Day beside the dead body {of her younger sister under a 100- {foot high trestle The girls apparently had |from the railroad bridge. In a mo- |ment of consciousness the injured |girl said her sister fell i i 1 Qoo rr e e By Popular Demand the Mirroer Cafe 'is now open ‘he {<an to help her and I fell through 00.” | |mng on the brink of the ravine the trestle bridges ended an all-night search for the girl: Child killer Fred Stroble at Los | Angeles indicated he would plead | not guilty by reason of insanity |to the brutal murder of six-year- |eld Linda Joyce Glucoft. 24 Hours a Day Steaks and RARRARRRRARAIRRRIRRRARRRRRFRRRARRIRRN IN ACCORDANCE WITH TITLE 37, Chap. 4, ACLA 1949 TERRITORIAL SCHOOL TAX FOR 1949 8$5.00 NOW DUE AND PAYABLE Who Must Pay School Tax: All male and female persons over 21 years and under 55 years of age. EXCEPT: Unemployed dependent females Active military or naval personnel Paupers Insane persons Permanently injured—unable to earn a living. If payment is noet made prior to the first day of December of each year in which tax is due a penalty of $2.50 attaches. % MAIL your remittance to Department of Taxation Box 2751 Juneau, Alaska uneau OO S S 2 S NN NN NN QOO ANOC ToNotoNs oNo%s OO DOININNNX Honest Injun, lady, it's the truth! You get America’s handiest cleaner—a real triple-action —at this new low price (cleaning teols extra). It's Hoover's newest model, * ~ Now At Alaska Eleciric Light & Power Company or Call at 204 Simpson Bldg.—J NS OO00E0 @ There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! i o T e e prospecting, and |sent services of the two airlines | Aleutian Peninsula from a defense { bridal gown | standpoint. MAN KILLS SELF i parently had mistaken a red ker- | was wearing a red kerchief when jted Mrs. Goodman's red kerchiet — | away, “through | trestle, T heard her scream and | Their discovery by five boys play- | of these Al-| with a total of 4,500}airport today, when Mr. and Mrs will provide the largest | Marlin Bernard Feero left for Seat- within Al- | tle. n Woodley of | Mr. Feero and his bride, issued | former Lorene Helen Krause, plan PNA said in a statement | through his Seattle office ya week’s honeymoon before estab- The purchase price and the ac-|lishing their home here. Combination acka carrie route mil [trunk line aska, President A. G. operation quisition date were not announced Woodley and Robert Reeve, Presi- 16y, sy 3 ineau, is the daughter of Mr. and dent of Reeve Airways, were in gl Mrs. G. Emil Krause, who moved Jithpnss soday: to Anchorage several years ago. Woodley said the route of the|', 20° T o yecas 6g The bridegroom, who grew up in combined operation would extend y: P Juneau is the son of Mr. and Mrs from Juneau through Anchorage(toiitt Yoo el ot this cit or Kodiak and the Aleutian L'hzun‘ i 2 o : The Feero-Krause marriage Was t ttu. A spokesma said all pre- A T et pre-1 ..o candlelight service late Wed- The bride, who was born in Ju- au, nesday afternoon in the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, the Rev | Wwillis R. Booth officiating. The church was decorated with pale lavendar and white flowers. 1e pretty young bride made a lovely picture in her long pale blue gown, and her flowers were deli- cate pink roses. In the absence of her father, the bride was given in marriage by Mr. | W. A. Chipperfield | |would be continued under PNA. “One carrier service will aid im- measurably in the development of the Territory Woodley's state- ment said. “Increased efficiency will result in better economics to both the public and the government. Such one-carrier service along the important and strategic coastal reutes of Alaska is a logical step in establishing a sound and eco- nomic route structure in Alaskan air transportation.” Miss Irene Williame es- | Woodley said an “adequate and|® 1id, wearing an old-rose frock, dependable transportation servics” | which, with her Colonial bouguet would aid in development of the[of vellow roseS; contrasted the to make a -charming picture in pastels. | Mr. Ken Shaffer served Mr. Feero | fas best man, and ush: were Mr. | 'Drm Pegues and Mr. Joe Wadall.| Wedding songs were by Mr. Ernest Ehler, accompanied by Mrs. Carol Beery Davis The bridegroom’s tained for the wedding reception, | in their apartment in the Ahlers| Apartments. Receiving guests, Mrs. Ferro wore deep blue, while the brid mother was in plum-color. The rooms were beautifully de- | corated with flowers, and the sup- per table centered by the bride’s cake was handsome, the silver ser-| vice gleaming in candlelight. In charge of the guest book was the bridegroom’s year-old sister, Audrey (Patsy), Feero, who wore a pale pink frock. { Assisting at the reception were Mesdames Ed Shaffer, P. D. E. Mc- Iver, Elmer Jones and Darwin Hoel. | Then newlyweds and Mrs. Krause | returned to the Feero’s home yes-| terday for Thanksgiving dinner. Mrs. Krause plans to be in Juneau for another week, then go to the states for a month’s visit in the Pacific Northwest. he is livi in the family home the Hillcrest Apartments, the dence which Mr. Feero and his bride will occupy on their return parents enter- AFTER MiSTAKING AUNT FOR TURKEY PEMBROKE, Ga., Nov. 25— A Thanksgiving Day turkey hunter committed suicide after he ap- chief for a cock’s comb and killed his aunt The dead were identified by Sheriff E. W. Miles of Bryan County as Mrs. Bertha Goodman, 35, and William E. Ruff, 29, both of Savannah. Sheriff Miles said Mrs. Goodman she and Ruff took stands atout 30 paces apart for the shoot yesterday. Apparently, said Miles, Ruff spot- | bokbing in the thick brush along i | the Ogeechee river and fired. | Mrs. Goodman's husband, who | had taken a position some distance | said he came running up | when the shot was fired and found Ruff kneeling with Mrs. Gnadman‘ |in his arms. from their honeymoon. i Goodman said Ruff cried, “Oh,} Mr. and Mrs. William Feero were | my God, I've killed your wife.” Be- }in Seattle when they learned that ne: shotgun i for their marriage, and they fturned to Juneau last Friday from the states. A plot at Chicago to free “Mad-| The bridegroom has been asso- Dog Killer” James Morrelli was|{ciated with his father in bustness foiled when two of his hoodlum {since his return last spring from friends were arrested outside theithe University of Alaska, where Cook County jail. Morrelli is|he was a premedic student. awaiting execution. The bride returned to Juneau in related, Ruff placed a against his head and fired. September after more than a year in Springfield, Ohio. The Shah of Iran has arrived in Detroit on his tour of the United States. He says, “the United States is much greater than my expecta- tions.” MIRROR CAFE open 24 hours daily.—adv 57-5t Now We put the SERVE 1’ a good thing to know, when you bring in your | car, that our factory-trained mechanics know it best. It’s equally important to know that these men work with specially designed equipment to help them find and correct the trouble . . . and that they use factory-engineered and inspected parts. But we don’t stop there. To insure your satisfac- tion, we put extra emphasis on courtesy and fair dealing all along the line.You’ll agree, when you pay us a visit, that “We put the SERVE in SERVICE!” R. W. COWLING (0. 115 Front Street o Telephone 57 the | | the same question over Ezra Pound's Charlie Gillham's “Sled+ Dog" and other poems of the North | which is just off the presses. ! Dean goes on to question whether | lor not Charlie’s verses are poetry, because literary critics raise | to in Alaska and to Seattle’ between October 15 and March 15 ® Now’s the time to go places . . . see the sights ... visit friends. Now while you can take advantage of Pan American’s annual fare reductions! Buy your bargain fare tickets between October 15 and March 15 . .. you can use them until April 15! Fly now with the world’s most experienced airline . . . stretch your travel dollars. but pisan Cantos” which was award- ed the Library of Congress prize as the best poetry of the year, the matter fails to bother him. He| is publishing them because he be- | lieves sportsmen will like them. Gillham's verses carry strains of | chuckling humor as in “Your | | Guide,” Noel Verville’ Radio Cat, ‘Beartooth Bill” oommates,” ‘Whiskey and Women,” and others. | He hits a thoughtful strain in “Sled Dog,” “Breaking the Trail” and Making Themselves a Home.” The biographical sketch will be of | entertaining interests to thousands | in Alaska, Canada, the United Stat- | es and Mexico who know this hardy | | outdoorsman. Already there is argu- |ment in local circles whether or | introduction vers TICKETS 600D UNTIL APRIL IS YOU SAVE ON BOTH ONE-WAY AND ROUND-TRIP FA| BETWEEN SEATTLE Al fares, plus fox Children 2:12 yeons, holf of bargain fore. tnfonts, free o/w*| KETCHIKAN' isr*: ketter | not the |than the | | Mr. Gillhan, biolo;i‘ w.h the | | Fish and Wildlife Service, until | {a year ago, left Juneau at that time and is now living in Edwa,rdsville,‘ Ill, where the is engaged in free lance writing. ! *INCLUDES CONNECTIONS BETWEEN KETCHIKAN AND ANNETTE ISL. MONE WAY, ROUND TRIP PARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 el 2uv AMERICAN £ 2\ Wortp Arways l% #Tpede Mark, Pan American Airways, Inc. FISHING VESSEL ASSISTED The Coast Guard Cutter 52013 of Petersburg went to the assistance of the fishing vessel Elizabeth adriit at the north end of Wrangell Nar- | rows after engine failure Wednes- day night. Owner Fred Magill and three | ons were aboard the Elizabeth. | It was taken in tow by the cutter. | | | i There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! PETERSBURG VISITOR Walt Burhlund of Petersburg a guest at the Baranof Hotel. ¢ fallen | fore he could stop him, Goodman {the young couple advanced the date | re-| | We'll make him (or her) happy W Here’s what we have for Your Baby "“Taylor Tot"” Strollers 3- and 6-Year Cribs Stuffed Animals “Tester Bahes" (Good in home or car) Matching Cribs and Wardrobes in white or maple 0 Cribs Bassinettes Trainers Trainer Chairs You'll find a complete line of baby furniture at Home Beautiful . . . Come in - you're-always welcome “OMQ\UTIFdL Box 725 Seward Street Juneau oo ea. |