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PAGE EIGHT 3 MISSION T0 CRASH SCENE_CONTINUES WEATHER - BLOCKED For the fourth day since wreck- age of a missing Air Force C-54 was sighted high in the rugged Fairweather Range, the 10th Air! Rescue Squadron crew has been un- | able to ily into the area because of bad weather there. | coastal Airlines carried 73 n:\ssnn-{Bpwt HAS pROGRAM 1 Ely Jones and 47 LEAVE, 26 ARRIVE . 5™ ' Leaving for Sentinel Island was | 0" A(A THURSDA | Mr. Coro; to Skagway: C. A. Me- Mickle and to Hawk Inlet was Tom | Conrad. Yesterdays flights of Alaska other | Forty- here and between Juneau and Southedxt Alaskan points. seven were taken from 26 brought to Juneau. Arriving here yesterday from Haines were Edgar Lokken, Dick Lavine, Robert Potter, Robert Bol- gers, MEETING ON MONDAY The Business and Professional | Women’s Club will have a program | meeting Monday noon, August 7, Col. Bernt Balchen repeatedly got discouraging weather reports today and said this afternoon that tite | meteorologist considered tomorrow afternoon as the first likely chance of a weather break. Pilots, mountaineers and a para- troop doctor continue to maintain readiness for a reconnaissance trip, for which a ski-equipped twin-en- gine airplane is stowed with emer- gency supplies. No hope is held for survival of the six occupants of the four-engine aireraft which crashed Saturday, but planning continues for removal on the terrace of the Baranof Hotel. The program will be in charge of | the education committee, Mrs. Dof- | othy Clem, Chairman. Mrs. Wm. Krasilovsky, will be the guest ton, Edward Bolton, J. S. Payne, Elizabeth Haakinen, Betsy Ann Haakinen and Charlie Reed From Skagway: D. A. Mickels, John Reilly, Carl Baker, Clyde Yemmi, C. Henry Martin; from |speaker. Ketchikan: F. Guertin; from Hoo-| The regular business meeting has | nah: Lilly Fawcett, John Fawcett, | been postponed until the following | Maybelle Benson; from Hawk In- | Monday. | let: C. B. Williams. | Members are urged to make their | Here from Sitka were E. Martin- | réservations not later than Satur- sen, B. Howard, C. Whittmore;|day evening. Guests are welcome, from Todd: Darrell Barker; from | Petersburg: Eldor Lee; from Lake | Hasselborg: Edgar A. Poe and R. G. Monroe. CITY COUNCIL TO MEET | 1949, have been awarded $3600 va | (ndustrial Board award was signed | ' THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA INDUSTRIAL BOARD | AWARDS $3,600 FOR AIR ACCIDENT| Parents of David T. Huycke, Jr., who was killed in an accidental fall from an airplane of the Sour- dough Air Transport on Apri 19, the Alaska Industrial Board and the award has been filed in the District Court for judgment Dby Judge George Folta. Plaintiffs were represented by William L. Paul, Jr, and Ralph Rivers represented the defendants he Sourdough Air Transport and and A. R. Johnsen. The I by Henry A. Benson, Commissiorier | | s Labor, chairman. The fall from the plane occurred at Annette Island when Huycke, third member of the DC-3 non- scheduled airplane, was “fixing the draft at the door.” BUREAU OF BUDGET OFFICER were J. Scully, W. J. Huckleberry, |4, s. Culbertson, Gene Buse, R {Johnson, Mr. Stug, Andrew John- son, R. Lockwood and Mr. Vog'; to Wrangell: L. Desmnd and Lon Williams. To Petersburg: Stanley Baskin, IN DOLLY DIVISION OF lO(M IROUI (lASSI( Mrs. Charles Hirshe.y. Mildred Her- Luis DeFlorin has taken the lead } Evan Evanoff and Harold Stratton; in the Dolly Varden division of the |to Hoonah: George Wilson and Chamber of Commerce trout derby, | Lillian ~ Collier; to Pelican: W. while the cutthroat division leaders } Kirkewald. remained unchanged. For Sitka: Frederick Alen, Ben DeFlorin’s top-weight entry | Bailey, Daryl Miller, C. Jack, C. weighed five pounds four ounces, | Whittmore, Mrs. G. Kelly, Mrs. C. ten ounces better than Carl Lane's | Hauck, Dawson Muggy, H. Johnson, four-pound ten-ounce Dolly, which I Miss 9. Muskaton, Mrs. headed the derby ladder for the jand Alma Robertson. past week, To Haines: T. C. Whiteside, R. Jack Campbell's four-pound two- | Kleweno, Edith Walker, C. H. Matt- ounce entry puts him in third place, json, Mrs. England and Glen Eng- while Catalino Barril Jr.’s three- |land; to Superior: John Tenneson; pound eleven-ounce catch is inJto Excursion Inelt: Elinor Hooker, fourth pléace. J. Christenson and Mrs. Christen- operations from the Juneau airport DeFLORIN TAKES LEAD Leaving for Ketchikan yesterday Muskaton | AT 8 P. M. IN CITY HALL | The regular meeting of the Ju- neau City Council will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the City Hall. for West Seventh, Eighth and Nxth Streets may come up for approval, | according to Mayor Waino E. Hen- |drickson. The project will be fin- |anced with the aid of funds pro- | vided under the Public Works Bill | for Alaska. Monthly reports from city de- partment heads ‘will be read by the may be considered, he said. At the COUNTRY CLUB—Lobsters ‘l‘rnwns, Oysters, Steaks, Chicken | and Chinese Dishes. OPEN ALL | NIGHT. 712t | Close out Special Imported China, % off. .The Nugget Shop. 71-2t Dr. C. Earl Albrecht, who has < topped the cutthroat division for about six weeks, is still staying pui, since no one has caught one bigger than his 3-pound 13-ounce entry. Jack Lahaie is second and E. J. Cowling third. The trout derby ends August 15. No charge is made for entering; all “entries must be turned in for weighing and measuring at the Junéau-Young Hardware Comparfy on Front Street, Prizes are being offered for the{ biggest ' Dolly Vardens and cut- throats caught on rod and reel in the fresh waters of Southeast Al- aska, according to derby committee | chairman Pete Warner. A GRAYS WILL LEAVE wies » FORGHIGHWAY TRIP TO FAIRBANKS Vacation-bound, Mr. and Mrs Douglas Gray, David and Alan Gray and Bobby Johnson will leave for Haines and a highway trip Baturday. Fairbanks and Anchorage will be. their destination. y I Ice cream cak ATTENTION TUURISTS Ride the Maillrcat Yakobl for an intimate acquaintance with SE Al- aska. Leaving every Wednesday arrive Juneau Saturday night. Sewing machines for rent at the White Sewing Machine Center *Minnesota— Land of 10,000 Lakes Plans for a $20,000 sewer project | council, and civil defense ordinances | | | RETURNS FROM ALASKA TRIP Sam Broadbent, of the Bureau o!! Budget, Washington, D.C., returned ; to Juneau yesterday after a mp! | through Alaska that took him as far north as Pt. Barrow. Mr. Broadbent leaves Juneau Sat- urday southbound on his return to his Washington office. | Good News for Ice Cream Eaters! With every quart -of delicious SWIFT’S ice cream you buy at Percy’s Saturday and Sunday— you get A PINT FREE. e Rolls. ... 55 SEATTLE MISSES IN ; JUNIOR GOLF MEET CHICAGO, Aug. 4—»—Two 16- year-old misses, Seattle’s Patricia Lessef and Virginia Dennhy, Lake Forest, Ill, were opponents today for the championship of the 24th annual Junior Invitational Open Golf Tournament at Indian Hill Country Club. Miss Lesser scored a 1 up triumph 17-year-old Nancy Reed, Nash- ville, Tenn., yesterday in her semi- final match. Miss Dennehy gained the final round by defeating Bar- bara Blakely, 15, Anniston, Ala., 2 and 1. WASHINGTON ARCHITECT STUDIES TERMINAL SITES H. A. Morris, Washington, D. C,, architect, arrived here yesterday, enroute to the East after a trip hrough the Territory. He is em- sloyed by the firm of Thomas Bourne Associates of Alaska, An- -horage, which specializes in struc- ures for the aviation industry. Morris came to Alaska to s(udyi sites for air terminal buildings at} the Fairbanks and Anchorage in-) ternational airports. He was an overnight guest at the Baranof Hotel and expected to 80 to Seattle this afternoon by Pan American Alrways. TO MEET AUGUST 14 T ! MENDENHALL 4-H CLUB = | 1 the Mendenhall 4-H Club for boys will be postponed until Monday, August 14 at 2 pm, at Minfield School. Arrangements . are ' now being made by civic organizations to fur- nish transportation for members who are urged to be ready when the bus stops for them. The meeting will be an important one as plans and discussions for the coming fair will be the high light: Richard Gaines, Secretary ‘ The re,ular bUSLIESS “<EULEZ FLEISCHMANN on a product s like 24-carat on gold—the finest it can be. Try FLEISCHMANN PRE- FERRED Blended Whiskey and be convinced. DR. TED OBERMAN Optometrist EvEs EXAMINED VISUAL TRAININ® s“Sport of Kings™ _NIGHT RACES TELEPHONE 268 SIMPEON BLD&. JUNEA Featuring FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1950 GENERAL CONTRACTORS PHONE 357 Glacier Construction Co. New Building — Remodeling — Cabinet Work Plastering — Concrete Pouring Sand and Gravel Hauling IT'S SO u . ECONOMICAL DARIGOLD Evaporated WHEN YOU BUY... Darigold Evaporated Milk, you know its quality is guaranteed . . . with strict laboratory control assuring its constant purity f DARIGOLD : EVAPORATED ¥ (o555 DARIGOLD § ‘Snake Pit Downs Waich the live thoroughbreds run 8 RACES NIGHTLY! Post Time: &3, 900 93,1000 10:30, 11:00, 11:30, 12:00 (All" Races) Weather Clear ==-- Track Fast! Live Thoroughbreds — No Quarterbreds entered Track President Starting Official Trainer - Track Announcer Gene Lockridge Gordon Kanouse Chuck Gray Johnny Bowers The Circus Room is featuring Lillian Uggen for your listening and dancing pleasure. SNAKE PIT DOWNS:.--South Franklin Street