The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 29, 1949, Page 2

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PAGE TWO TUICE POOLS HELPS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA CTINY NENANAWITE | b CIVIC BUILDING FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Nov. 29.— | {#—The community of Nenana, with | a population of 390, dedicated one e the Nenana Ice Pcol organization. i The building was financed in part ! by funds from the annual ice break- up guessing contest and the rest s ‘ WINS NATIONAL CROCHET TITLE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1949 'INSIDE ROTARY' IS THEME OF MEETING TODAY In contrast to most of its 52 weekly luncheon programs a year, featuring dozens of non-member Rotary Club. The actual program featured a | talk by Hugh Wade, chairman of the classifications committee, and | i general discussion of some of the Carson Lawrence and Ted Hyder were appointed to make special plans for the members’ party De- cember 27. On the regular program commit- tee for next month are T. A. Mor- gan, chairman; Eric Newbould, Judge George W. Folta, B. E. Feero, and Elton Engstrom. Visitors introduced today were James A. Williams of the Univer- sity of Alaska faculty, who began instruction in the annual mining of the largest and best civic build- & K d i P“ 0 E N l X ings in the Territory Saturday 'J"’fni:u“R“';‘ “:’:‘l““b subjects, the | o, ye here last night, and Wes night. | Xuns it 2 a“;] ‘“b meeting today | gyerhy, Alaska Coastal Airlines It is the new headquarters of Db the emphasis’ on the Juneali|orhiee mannger. Laughingly introduced as a visi- tor, Tom Dyer was given a hearty welcome at his first Juneau meet- ing in about two months. His make- = by the Bank of Fairbanks. uj rds have been reported weekl: e s L - p cards rep eekly, The $43,000 building, 100 by 5 bl Betiol i, showing his attendance at a num- feet, will accommodate up to 1,000 | As the memvership of all clubs|ber of stateside Rotary Club meet- wear you want for daytime, activities. Sturdy, yet lovely, Phoenix Walking Sheers have the happy faculty of good per- formance. Look for the Red Stripe at the top, in the most wonderful colors of the season. B Rehiends Co QuALITY SINCE /86T ing down the Tanana River. | Building materials were imported from Portland. Townspcople pro- vided most of the labor for con- struction. George A. Smith, the cntractor, said there has been only | an average of two skilled workers per month since last April. (EYGHTEEN COLLEGE TEAMS UNDEFEATED, | UNTIED FOR SEASON NEW YORK, Nov. 29—{P— Eighteen college football teams sported unbeaten, untied records to- WINNING Mrs. Thomas L. Nightingale, i FORT YUKON, Aleska, Nov. prize-winning tablecloth, six go U. S. CROCHETING CHAMPIONSHIP for third time, 1 1d cups and some of 53 ribbons important one in any Rotary Club. As in many other aspects, Alaska rresents unusual and sometimes unique problems. Accent on the Juneau Retary Club was marked throughout to- ;day's luncheon meeting in the Earanof Gold Room. Although President Bob Akervick announced the names of those on the Decem- ker program committee, this group will be assisted by two special com- mittees, and it also has the in- spration of a date next month of i significance for this particular club. December 6 is the anniversary of the founding of the Juneau Rotary Cluk in 1935. The two special committees are for two traditional holiday events— the children’s party December 20 of Sacramento proudly shows 29— nded The Thanksgiving trought nary a casualty Here are stockings designed to people, It was built several inches in Rotary International is based|ings. give you the kind of beauty and higher than the high mark of the cn representation Lty occupation| Tom and Pat Dyer returned here last flood to assure against its float- and profession, this subject is an|aboard the Denali after a vacation which both enjoyed greatly. Going outside in Septemter, the Dyers took delivery on a car in Seattle, then drove wherever their fancy indicated. i Although they did not get to see | the World Series in person, as was their first plan, they watched the Series by television, in Edwards- ville, 1l The Mayor of New York City— William O'Dwyer——is in a hospital this morning. His physicians say he’s dead tired, . . .just worn out. And he’s in for a good rest, with no visitors for the present. | The headquarters branch of the AF of L Sailors Union of the Pa- cific voted unanimously & yesterday L R A I RIS i ettt [ day and only one of them-—Notre she has won. Mrs. Nightingale tied for California title at state faif |ana the members' exchange of gifts [in favor of & new 10 T TS I S BB i L e e — - - | Dame_had a geme left to complete| n Sept., will be given national award in Chicago. _(International) | Decem:er 27. [the Pacific Mar;?m:mxggctmxx HAH OF IRA“ ‘Man “is e m,"} iy ;s B lR s St S foRs ol | Named to plan the December 20Other West Coast branches of the \ o The Irish wind up their cam- 2 3 party, to which Rotarians take union are expected to follow suit. T i [ i ( lu(k Bfeak paign next Saturday against South- mg H A primarily for medical treatment.|their own youngsiers or their Jroi 8 -lo A((Epfl NE.‘VBJ ‘ H"‘s j ACRPOT' Y ern Methodist. They fi[op-up Begms § | He has been in a Hong Kong hos- | «chilgren-for-the-day,” are Ellis| Norsemen made a soup, full of e 4 [ w“h Dlld Bomb for their 10th triumph of pite. jadtec quitting the doomed | Reynolds, chairman; Vern Metcalfe, | Vitamin C it was later found, with o ¥ and their 38th straight game flood ]’hveai Dr@ 5 Nationalist capital at Chungking| geej] Casler and Eric Newbould. a Lase of rose haws. y CONIRA d | T it Heteat. J as Chinese Communist forces ap-| el R E e e ‘ proached. | (#—A Fort Yukon native poun an unexploded tomt with an and lived to tell about it. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 20— P FORT KNOX, Ky., Nov. 28—(P— Other West Coast ports were ex-| The Shah of Iran hit the jackpot 21 Knowi Dead ioll| axe teams Amon, them, No " ¢ the lead ¢ the|here today before leaving by plane » pected to follow the lead of thel today before e AL The native found an unfamiliar under uthern o EXPLOSICN IN CAR B smusnters branch here of the|for Winsiow Alr Fleld, Aris, bub| ot BAC PG il el fears Sailors Union of the Pacific in vot- | it failed to pay off. Jflt\,’:f‘m“;;“fi“fz’f;’" L‘RE ‘:l“k:i’: Oklanoma touted Oklahoma ALM:|yorgers in storm-drenched north- Kllls WIFE OF | a visit to the officers club, | : Ackod sl b U R L L, Al 4 y ) turned their ma- | on the a new contract with| Maritime Association was unanimous, | machine one of the officers’ wives | ing to ac the Pacif! axe hut couldn't dislodze it. Closer scrutiny showed it was an lege of Pacific r ay to moppi Poly, 88-0; G bro! jor attention t operaticns—repai Shah was attracted to a slot | ing 3 Wondering what to give? :| " DALLAS GAMBLER, The vote here unexploded bomb, s r 5 at - viand State he vote was conducted yesterday |dropped a coin in the machine. | T I and business establish- X . ;Ir‘n al]oPacih‘ Coast ports. Results| Officers were somewhat em pra/ [ R UNOH RLver e JBRL ; JeE Lo ALLAS, Tekas, Nov. 29—(P— Switch to Sir| Lt Robert M. Wright of Fort Virgis |M:‘ Nilcras aionic: wits ot 'al 3 rassed when it failed to pay 2fter hitting the jackpot. The Shah i took the incident good naturedly. The 30-year-old Iranian monarch and his rty plan to continue on California following a visit to nd Canyon. lower Skagit RI remaining n the any was expected to in the other por be released tod The contract, runs to Sept. 30, 1951. It establishes an employer paid welfare fund for an old sailors’ bhome or pension payments and to raises sailors’ $20 a month. Gra Richardson detonated the bomb. ly known Dallas gambler, was d today when an automobile she started blew up. Dallas police said there appar- ontly were explosives in the car. The explosion occurred in Oak Cliff, a Dallas residential district. danger Calvert Reserve the choicest you can give «..0r servel | Democratic Representative Vicic | Wickersham E predicts that Congress B II L I vm pen: e pe ve an rease in old | noma year. The T | cent amount i volunteers and to sandbag sat- barrier urated river Regair work Northern Railw the ugh to meet pr Ten R | 5 The Tito Government is six years | current h ] she was the wife of Herbert ; BLENDED WHISKEY—86.8 PROOF " H old today. And there’s dancing in| L it e |to replace a half mile of Noble, 40, who was wounded in GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. CALVERT LLERS CORP., N.Y. C. SALMON CATCH ON |Farm Commifiee e sees of ihe vusouss casital sovien pourmicar LOSTILLERS CORP, Y. & A Belgrade dispatch says there was GROUP GROWING 21d one-half miles scuth of Mount } tified men Sept. 9. On two previous ) COLUMBEA RIVER pleads Inno‘e“i (a torchlight parade in the cliy last | MOSCOW —#— rie All Union Vernon. | ocasions Nable was wounded In 11-]Zh! _“‘ which 20-_L1musand murch‘- Society for the Dissemination of 'r“ 5 y-seven [)Cx?(»??,'wele .lulll- gun fights. i ers demonstrated In favor of Tito's Political and Scientific knowledge|€d @nd one is missing as a result | % o) ! j of the weekend storm that roared |and scientific knowledge. Member- in cne a 1,000-mile front extending ship has reached AJO.OGD—alninst‘il‘f"“ British Cclumk‘n:\‘ to southern trebling since 1948. |Oregon and then slashed its way government. is disseminating a lot of politica New York City Council members have refused to permit convicted Communist Benjamin Davis to re- BELOW LAST YEAR| OnLobbying Law ASTORIA, Cre., Nov. 29—(P— WASHINGTON, Kov. z3—(@—The ! Packers reported today that thejNational Farm Committee includ- |¢ he United Nations food agricul- re organization has voted to make ol FURNACE 1049 Columbia river salmon catch|ing two state agricultural commis ts permanent headquarters at | In 1947 the Society had organized |With 100 mile-and-hour winds ac- ross the Cascade and Rocky Moun- main a member of the body. They decided unanimously that Davis bad Yes, it’s a fully automatic RAY, the choice of leading architects wher- was at least 300 percent below last | sioners, pleaded innocent today t0,Rome, Ttaly. The choice was made e, . i 4 o " about 1,000 lectures a month in 5 : Y orfeited s ol to hold office year’s. charges of violating the Federal|jast nigl shing ing i et it M 2 | tains before veering into Manitoba forfeited his right to hol L 2 O i i e i Jar st night at a Washington meeting | towns and villages. In 1843, 7.000| to 0 . il ot b en he was convicte of conspir- ever ol is burned . . . complete win- | The pac called the ocean-|Lobbyist Registration law. that lasted ten hours. Thirty coun- |jectures were given in a month, |Nieteen of the deaths were, in|’ A h o conditiont 7 fil | trolling season “a failure,” and said | The pleas were entered by Coun- |tries voted for Rome, while 28 voted | put in '1949 vhc"nml And’ g | British Columbia. ing to advocate overthrow of the ter air con qapng « o o fresh, fil- b both the spring and fall runs in|sel for Tom Linder, Georgia Com-|for the United States. The decision |about 20,000 lecture e everal hundred evacuated |government. tered warm air in every room the Colum:'a river were below last ' missicner of Agriculture; James E.lfor 1taly was then made unanimous. | R AR i | families returned to their flooded o e s d:eopmtingcutumuglylW- season. McDonald, Texas Commissioner of PR | & | homes, property damage—already . e B upac Tup Agriculture; Ralph W. Moore of | 1n Albany, a New York State | A u!men feared in the millions—mounted hington, Robert M. Harris of | supreme Court Justice has declared | Seeks Ann higher. PALM SPBINGS New York and the National Farm % : B ® Winter Av. Temp. 81 deg. unconstitutional the Feinberg Law AIR rRfiLN(E plA“E ’Commixtpe. a Texas corporation Iwhich foshidr the employment afil (RASHB. HVE DIE 1 At the arraignment_proceedings | Communists in. the State. schod! | [ |in Federal District Court, Judge|_3,5!fln_.‘,umw Ha Btk i} | Alexander Holtzoff scheduled the i yipeq the provisions of the Fein- |“ FlAMING WRE(K trial for Feb, 13. He gave the de-fporg Law as “witch-hunting.” State fendants until Jan. 9 to file special | rricials are appealing the decision. LYON, France, Nov. 29—(®—Five | motions. | ) oy i : | persons were killed today in the i The talk in shington 18 thati flaming crash of an Air France| SQUARE KNOT HERE ‘Fr-deral rent controls are likely to | | ?I:ane akout 15 ’mllei m?nhwc‘st \;’l’\ F‘x.'eigh‘cer Square Knot of» the | 4ie when the present extension ex- Lyon. f‘"_ fr,m e bdld) in Paris 37 ‘Alas x‘btleamsmp»Ccm]‘mu,\ arrived pires next June. The administration persons were akoard the plane. this afternoon from Seattle. is expected to ask another exten- 10 WASHINGTOX L1 IS SUMMONED WASHINGTON, Nov. 29—®— | | The State Department has autho- rized a trip to the United Stai 3 i Tsung-jen, acting Pre: of the Chinese Nationalist gov | ; { ® Warm, Sunny Days ® Dry, Clean Air GET OUT IN THE SUN— GET INTO THE FUN! TAHQUITZ VISTA or EL ENCANTO Palm Springs’ finest moderate priced apartment hotels. Swimming Pool . . . private sun decks . . . lovely gardens . .. just thre blocks from heart of village. Juneau Plinbilg . and Healing Co. 3rd and Franklin—Phone 787 { The crash occurred near Sain- — _ . | ment sion, but the request may run into | « 1 Just-Chaleyssin, a town of about The index finger of the S““““‘xlmnu opposition on capital hilLl Officials said today that the RATES: Twin be.dl‘oom from | 500 population. American Consulate General at| $9.00. Apartments with complete | ere—e 1 | of Likerty is eight feet long A North Dakota Republican— | {gation of the rising cost of coffee. Said Young. . .“It seems clear there is considerable speculation and pro- fiteering in coffee.” { President Truman, his family, and Ihis chief advisers are at their va- cation spot near Key West, Florida. ' Mr. Truman plans to get in plenty |of hiking, swimming and sun-bath- {ing. But he’ll also have important {work to do. Among other things, he !must work on his “State of the| iUniun" message. H i Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tomplin of I Hoonah are registered at the Bar- l'anof Hotel. REQUESTING annulment irom husband, Count Alfred de Ma- rigny, who was acquitted of mysterious murder of her father, Sir Harry Oakes, of Nassau, Nancy Oakes de Marigny lesti- fies in Manhattan, N. ¥., supreme court. (International Soundphoto ALL r_fi'e—" A PRICES 2 5 - James D. Heer,, 20 (left), Ohio State University freshman, pleaded innocent at Columbus, 0., to a charge of first-degree murder in the slaying of a fraternity brother. Det. Sgt. Lowell V. Smeets said the shooting followed an argument with a girl friend and a reprimand from fraternity brothers. The former marine is shown at his arraign- ment. Joyce Crafton, 22, (right) of Cleveland, O., shown at the B u R R ow S station at Columbus, O., after her arraignment. She is being held as & material witness in the slaying. % Wirephoto, ! JUNEAU, ALASKA I | i : | | [ l . | 1 | | | WELDING C€O. PHONE 289 Hong Kong has been instructed to that General Li wants to make the | trip for “purely persomal” reasons, e EETNIERNG EERTEIESNEESENEEREE! e58NTIERRREER T RIRCRRREEBEEEAEEY LN ol NOW — NEW — LOW — FARES from JUNEAU Yakutat $30.00 Cordova$ 5350 Homer $27.00 Kodiak $105.00 10% Reduetion on Round Trip *Plus Tax Daily Scheduled Flights Anchorage — Cordova — Kodiak Homer — Yakutat Connections at Anchorage for all Interior and Westward Points kitchen and hotel service, from Springs Calif. Children Welcome . . . Write FEEIEIENRNBEBE) SEEIETERRERTRIETESIEITEST (TNTENSACNNNRNGETREENECEFETRIETN ESEISIENNNREY sixteen delicious jams, jellie native spruce boughs and ¢ perfect condition. HOLIDAY COMBINATION AND three jars of especially GOLD NUGGETS—Gift a gift which cannot be dup! world. Do you have sportsmen ‘Three large SOURDOUGH SAUCE—Bo Special Family Pack you are sending outside. Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 Send check or money order with tions you wish sent. .73 Homer, Prepaid by air to the States and Box No. 2 Nine jars of the rarest and most delicious of our products— MAN’ K—Gift Box No. 3 SPORTSMANS EALE: {Hlends on your list? They will enjoy this gif Qf Lowbush Cranberry Sauce, berries and two bottles of our Sourdough Sauce. HOMESTEAD STRAWBERRIES—Gift Box No. 4 $5.57 jars of old fashioned Strawberry Jam. —Gift Box No. 5 THEli‘otholl{ §;§SAk§S most commonly known wild berries— Red Raspberry Jam, Highbush Cranberry Jelly, Wild Rose Honey, and Lowbush Cranberry Sauce. For your own pantry shelf or to . S X8 | iss Li if b $15.00 for four persons. 6 99 Senator Milton Young—has sug- issue a visa to General Li if he ur pe 5 Accused and Witness e, B o et e a8 3o asie oi Alasica | The State Department was told| Palm Canyon Drive, Palm The Perfect Gift for Holiday Giving Wild berries of the Kenai Peninsula home-cooked into sauces—gift packed in for your holiday gifts. guaranteed to arrive in $5.40 s and ones —Gift Box No. 1 Large sections of pungent Alaskan spruce boughs covered with rich brown cones (approx. 3 1b.) for holiday decorating selected wild berry delicacies. $9.85 licated anywhere else in the $7.58 Spiced Blue- $6.87 6 bottles $4.80 12 bottles $8.13 include with other gifts x No. 6 Folder Sent on Request the name, address and the selec- A gift card bearing your name will be en-. closed. Please AIR MAIL your order to: ALASKA WILD BERRY PRODUCTS Ken and Hazel Heath Alaska e rr e e e e e e e e

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