The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 10, 1950, Page 6

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PAGE SIX HAMBURG POST FOR DR. GOOGE, MEDICAL DIRECTOR OF A. N. §. PHOTCGRAPHER ON COAST GUARD STAFF WILL PICTUREEVENTS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Wrong Number Was Right Number for Apariment-Hunter It's | I Marshall Erwin, owner of the easy to get an apartment in Case Lot grocery, decided that he would try something new this week. ! EARLY BIRDS WIN [ANCIENT NATIVE HG"'I' NET SIZE GROCERY PRIZES| CEREMONIES WILL SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSEN'S'action. No group of ancient scenes would be complete without the ap- pearance of the Medicine Man, and so he will be out Saturday in what might seem a final attempt to re- capture some of the popularity which he enjoyed in those by-gone days. He will be portrayed by one of the older Natives who can clearly recall the real Medicine Man of that epoch. The Alaskan Thlinget In- dian has a great deal to contribute to the true art of all Nations, and | this group of actors will do an outstanding job of each part they represent. The door will open at 7 pm. BE EVENT ON SAT. The older Native folks of Ju- neau have spent long hours in strenuous rehearsals this week for the pageant of Ancient Native Cere- monies which will be presented at the Salvation Army Hall on Wil- ‘oughby, Saturday, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. This affair promises to be a highlight in entertainment for it will be the first time that some J. D. Miller of Ketchikan is stop- | ping at the Gastineau Hotel. | FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1950 JERRY McKINLEYS HAVE FINE TRIP OUTHIDE A trip which combined busiiess and a short vacation took Mr. and Mrs. Jerry McKinley to Seattle and other Puget Sound cities. They re- turned yesterday by Pan American, after a pleasant two weeks outside. PAINTING AND DECORATING Priced to Meet Youar Budget PHONE 996 Ralph Treffers of these events have ever been de- picted in Juneau. Of special interest will be wedding ceremony which is re- corded in every detail, from the arrival of the bridegroom with his uncle in a canoe of the “Whale- Killer” tribe, until the feasting is all over. A narrator will explain each act and song to make it more interesting to the audience. Very costly oldtime cosiumes have been obtained for these pageants and much real art is to be seen in the Juneau—just call a wrong number Dr. James T. Googe, Alaska Na-| An official Coast Guard photog- |~ | “ 0" - = W B Bt B0 SEX OF (AT Ho. inser(bll 4 HIAX16 (R AOTE GroceEy tive Service medical director, will|fapher has joined the staff of tne| It SCs THAL Hhis noon, on bis| - appessing! In® TREEMMENG e leave here Wednesday on the tirst|17th district headquarters_here. |Munch hour at The Tmpires piant| by . SALEEIALY EAPHS L (,]“"\' e arrived Inl, ¢ at an npamne)m‘ho heard | 4cnm'm4"(ii T:ue Cne)7¥ fered to the first three winners: He has been assigned to the|Juneau aboard the Baranof, bring- | . | first prize, a case of mixed canned Quarantine and Immigration Sery-|iP€ With him nine years of ex- It y 3 . doubled by reducing the size of (.t second prize, a case of mixed ice there by the U.S. Public Health | Perience as a news photographer. ¢ was a one-xoom affair, andine mesh from the prevailing 5% | unneq vegetables; and third prize, Service. Dr, Googe has been with| Loueher, first official Coast Guard | seemed rather small to Brady for |y, squares to 5 inches, The male | , case of mixed canned fruit juices, the Alaska Native Service, on a | PhOtoBTapher to be assigned to the|him and his “_”“~ b._‘“ e told|¢ae dropped 20 percent. When Brwiti® werib o iR Ak two-year assignment from the U.S,|headquarters, will cover (Coast|the landlady (,!,"“, h; d “let Mer\ ;. o7, there were 25 percent jorning at 8:30 he found three per- Public Health, service since early| GUArd activities = throughout tne|know.” inasmuch d:v{“nq auart-|,, ore females caught on 5einch | sons waiting at the door for him— in 1948 " [ 17th Coast Guard District with hi§ | €S are 0 rar¢ and precious here.|, .. ynan on 5% and in 1948 it| pree persons with the correct solu- Announcement of his new assign- | SPeed Graphic camera, Coast Guard [ Shortly before he Waa duie 0| yaq 12 percent more. In those same | (on to the riddle. The saswer to nent reached him from Washing- fficials said. Whenever possible, he |return to work, he lh:)\fuhl he'd call | ot the catch of males was 25 the riddle is “15. ton. DO, today. He will fly soutn| ¥ill Photograph the actual work of [the landlady and inform her he|pc less in the smaller mesh| ne first prize was awarded to from here Wednesday with his wife, | '€ Service in Alaskan distress and wouldn't e the place. So heer in 1947 and 42 ‘percent less| jonn (Butch) Hogins Jr. Second THE Jotrmey to Eirops Wil be en. | i cae : called a number—he had the pre-|j gsq. Triss Wit to JRAGHE Solt and tirely by air. Formerly with the San Francisco | fix right and all the numbers| . =\ . 1948 and 1949 the pre- | third to Don Baker. It will be the first trip to Europe | Chronicle and Acme News Pic- |right, but 'f; i the numbers mix-| .. e size of the salmon was| Needless to say, the Case Lot for Dr. and Mrs. Googe 8, Laugtist MR A el R e ey | greater, so that even the 5% mesh grocery was bombarded with phone Before coming here, Dr. Googe | $raPhs which illustrated articles in| Upon hearing a feminine “hello,” | yseq by fishermen was ~small calls all morning. was a medical director with UNRRA Life, Time, and Saturday Evening Brady said: enough to snag a large quota of stationed in Wuhu, China Post “I don’t believe we can takeiyhe females that got into them. In Alaska he has successtully| During the war he spent one vear|that apartment—it's a little tco| 1 the fertilization test of the coped with the postwar doctor-| 1 Kodiak and on the Aleutian Is- (small.” N |sex ratio, the Bristol Bay research- — shortage faced by ANS. He said to- 1ds, whe he did photogr: | From the other end of the line|ens ypder Ole Mathison set up day that his recruiting visits tc 1 the air. He spent tWo yearsjcame this: |chicken wire pens in streams., A medical schools in the United as a photographer with “Why, it's not small as apart-|iect with an even male-female have resulted in applications trom young highly-qualified physicians in enough quantity to ensure the staff- ing of all available ANS medica positions in the coming fiscal year. Dr. Googe has also tussled suc- cessfully with the problems sur- rounding the construction and equipping of the new 200-bed tu- berculosis sanitorium at Mount Edgecumbe. “When they are fully staffed the hospital at Mount Edgecumbe anc the one at Anchorage, now in the process of construction, will he as good as any in the United States,’ he said. He termed his two-year Al stay “one of my most plea: assignments,” and said the Alas Department of Health and the pri- vate physicians throughout the Territory have been “splendid to work with and very cooperative.” From Juneau, Dr. and Mrs. Cooge will go to Denver, where they will spend a week visiting with their daughters Ruth and Mary. Mary will be graduated from the Uni- versity of Colorado School of Medi- cine in Denver in a year. Ruth is studying for a master’s degree in biology at the University of Colo- rado, Boulder, Colo. Dr. and Mrs. Googe will also stop in Chicago where their son James is studying at the University of Chicago for his master’s degree in hospital administration And after a short stay in Wash- ington, D.C, Dr. and Mrs. Googe will fly to Paris, where they will stay for one week before going to Hamburg, Dr. Googe said. AT BARANOF HOTEL John M. Adams returned yester- day from Annette Island and is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. moving with the Guam 2 Cc nvasion Japan He came to Juneau from the 8th Coast Guard District in New Or- leans. He had spent three years ! there, his work including the ')hn(nm‘é\])hl!\‘: of hurricances in | the Gulf Coast area. { Mrs. Lougher accompanied her | husband to Juneau and they are living in the anof Hotel. Their iome is in Berkeley, Calif. ALASKA POTTERS T0 st Guard, forces from to There will be a regular monthly business meeting of the Alaska Pot- wandering around somewhat in a 5 ers at 8 o'clock Monday night infg.,e ’ She is survived by three daugh- | their club rooms at the AB. Hall T A | ters, Mrs. Zumwalt, Mrs. Marie All members are urged io attend | Wright of Glendale, Calif., and 1s this meeting promises to be & FROM HAI ' Mrs. J. B. Haynal of Cleveland, N.Y. very important one insomuch as it the annual election night and with the advent of the Arts Show just two weeks dis- tant, it will be advisable to make last minute adjustments in ‘our plans for the pottery display. It will be intere: to club mem- bers as well as others to learn that the Juneau. Business and Profes- sional Women's Club plans to pre- sent a program on March 28 at 5 p.m. over station KINY with Mrs Gene Harmon giving a talk on the club is also, ind Crafts RUSS MORGAN HERE Russ Morgan of the Anchorage CAA staff is a guest at the Gas- tineau Hotel. WRANGELLITE HERE Arnold Prusi, Wrangell fisherman, is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. Here’s the best and most beautiful car at lowest cost you feel a little perplexed at that sLatcman and answered: ‘ here this noon?” | a right number as far as finding a MEET MONDAY NIGHT ed him an apartment of hers would ke vacant soon, ments go, but if the Wway ratio showed 99.3 percent of the e % |recovered eggs to be alive. With ' Brady said, “just the oneigne male to 15 females, there was room, you know, and besides, when |a qrop of only about 3 percent in I was up there this noon, I—" |the fertile eggs. Simpson Bldg. DR. ROBERT SIMPSON DR. TED OBERMAN OPTOMETRISTS Phone 266 for appt. DEATH (OMES TO MRS. JOHN CHRISTENSEN Mrs. Jonn (smma) Christensen | died this morning at the home of 'her daughter, Mrs. A. L. Zumwalt, 1131 Main Street. She was 87. | Mrs. Christensen had been living with the Rev. and Mrs. A. L. Zum- walt since December. Her remains [ will ve shipped to her former home | in Granger, Wash., for burial. | “What do you mean, one room? It's two rooms, and WHO was upi That started no end of contusion, | until it became clear Brady had | the wrong number. But he had Free Estimates soon-to-be-vacant apartment, The voice who answered inform- and that he would | have first choice in taking it. Brady is spending this afternoon H. L. King, J guest at the Baranof Hotel associated with Lytle and contractors. and two sons, H. C. Christensen ot | Granger, Wash., and Dr. A C.| Christensen of Glendale, Calif. A granddaughter, Mrs. Norma Tur-| | ner, resides in Juneau. | of Haines 1s a He is Green, ALASKAN (AB (0., Inc. 2-way radio-equipped, driver- owned, insured cabs. Phone9or 777 Additional new cabs on stand give faster and better service at all times. JOHN MAURSTAD—Pres. and Manager. RUTH MAURSTAD—Secy. and Treas. M.. l’. The Styleline De Luxe 4-Door Sedan This car alone provides the trim and tailored beauty of Body by Fisher, at lowest cost! This car alone offers a choice of the finest in automatic or standard FRESH Call RAY RICE for ‘ “awarity PLASTERING vomeine Your rooms refinished with the plaster that INSULATES | 6 for 85¢ PEETS | Granulated SOAP Coupon Deal - large pkg. — 3¢ PORK SHOULDER ROAST 5¢pound BEEF For those who just want i special offer. Cream that you buy at Pe Phone Douglas 21 | California Grocery Percy's apologizes to you folks who haven’t been able to get enough delicious Swift's Ice Cream Cake Roll. This week, an extra large shipment of this different ice cream cake roll is on hand and Percy’'s hopes to be able to accommo- date all of you. ce cream, Percy’s have a Saturday and Sunday only, you get one pint FREE with every quart of Swift’s Ice rey’s. NMIES ’ngUNT Y oy NS and HMeat Murket‘_ THE PURE FOODS STORE Quartjar | SATURDAY w=eeme- MONDAY CRISCO 3 Ib. can — 83« Best Foods MAYONNAISE -69 TISSUE GROUND KNUC FIRST...and Finest...at Lowest Cost! 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JUNEAU PHONE 121 Ocpound Spinach - Endive ‘FREE DELIVERY On Orders of $2.50 or More For Groceries PHONE 4978 PH FRESH CAULIFLOWER Ocpound FRESH CARROTS 2 bunches— 3 B¢ ROLLED VEAL § ROAST 5 ¢pound SMOKED HAM KLES 2 lhs. — 7 5¢ Fresh Broccoli - Artichokes - Green Onions - Radishes - Asparagus - §. For Meats ONE 371 9 o

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