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PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Your irl_ ot Designed to flatter your figure . .. Your Way of Living! Flannels Worsteds G The “Must” Fall - and - wardrobe . . slim suit of promising t great heig wear! Come see and rejoice in our vast array of 1950-styled suits. R M Rehtends Ca QuALITY SINCE 78 ON WED. FLIGHTS Alaska Coastal Airlines carried a total of 78 passengers on ilights Thursday with 7 on interport, 38 arriving and 33 departing Departing for Sitka were: David Velvet Trims hion - dom, you many more than a season of happy m,sS Tweeds abardines in your Winter . a trim, a fabric o reach hts in give /887 SOUTH BY PAN AM| Eighteen passengers arrived here from the south on Pan American World Airways Thursday: Ray Day, Louise and Martin Feist, Mildred Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lind- AF AIRCRAFT TAKING ALASKA GROUP 0 SCIENCE MEETING To take a party of Alaskans to Washington, D. C., for the first Alaskan Science Conference Nov- ember 9, 10, and 11, an Air Force aircraft from Elmendorf AF base landed here this morning. Because of bad weather, the military air. craft had to put down at Gustavus | last night. The Juneau party, joined by Del- egate E. L. (Bob) Bartlett is sched- uled to take off at ncon tomor. | row, going to Anchorage. From | there, a C-54 will take the entire | Alaska party direct to Washington. One over-night stop is planned. Arrangements for military trans. | portation to and from the confer- | {ence were made by John C. Reed lof the U. S. Geological Survey, chairman of the conference steering committee Delegate Bartlett returned this | afternoon from a survey of south- | east Alaska with a party of U. S.| Army Engineers. Gov. Ernest Gruening plans to! have an informal meeting of those members of the Statehood Com. mittee who are in or near Anch- orage. He, Bartlett and the im mediate former Delegate to Con- | gress (Judge Anthony J. Dimond | of Anchorage) are ex-officio mem- ! bers of the committee. Robert At.| | wood of Anchorage is chairman. | | Other Juneauites going to the ! national capitol on the military aircraft are B. Frank Heintzleman, | U. S. Forest Service Regional For- | | ester; ‘and Ray Taylor, who' heads the Forest Service Research Center; | Leo Saarela, Territorial Commis- | | sioner of Mines, and W. A. (Bud) | Elkins, Wildlife Management Sup- | ervisor of the U. S. Fish and Wild | UNEMPLOYMENT IS WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 — (B — Unemployment dropped to a two- yedr low of 1,940,000 in October. This was a fall of 401,000 from September. Reporting the drop today, the Census Bureau attributed it in part to the bite that draft calls took from the working force and to good weather which brought an expan- sion in farm employment. The bureau said the number of people holding jobs rose to 61,764,000 Ahighest ever for an October. There was nho sign that the big defense production program had brought any important increase in jobs or additional strain on man- power reserves as yet. In fact, non-farm employment fell 142,000 to a 53,273,000 total in October. Farm employment jumped 680,000 to an 8,491,000 level. Womén Whoiumed Children, Hallowe'en Trick, May Apologize MIAMI, Fla., Nov. 3—®—A mid- dle-aged woman who burned nine children in a ‘t'rick or treat” inci- dent Hallowe’en night may escape | prosecution if she apologizes prop- erly. Herbert Shapiro, assistant county solicitor, says he had prepared an information charging the woman— who was not named—with “tor- turing and tormenting” the young- sters. He sald she was suffering with | Life Service. George Sundborg, consultant to the Alaska Development Board, will go as far as Anchorage. [Afiierican Bomber Bases in England :Seaman of Crashed Seiner is Believed To Have Protedion; To HaElosl life WASHINGTON, Nov. 3—(#—Four anti-aircraft artilgvy units are; VANCOUVER, B.C. Nov. 3—®— Stevenson, Mrs. R. B. Brown, Da- |quist, Dan Levshakoff, Frank and going to England to set up defenses gjjoht hope was held today that a vid Brown, I. Thatcher, May Lokke; | Robert Pearce, Sgt. Laxton Pfohl, for American bomber bases there, seaman may have survived a night- for Lake Florence: Jack and Ethel James Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Henry the Army discloses. Westfall; for Fish Bay: L. Johnson; for Fick Cove: A. Colby. For Angoon: Mrs. Pearl Green- wald; for Pelican: Mr. and Mr: S Tfi.' J, Sigzile, William_Mak m B188a; for *Tenakee! Wal- | ter Schwind, B. H. Manery, Martin | Borlick. For Ketchikan: Ole Leirmo, Walt Kirkness; from Wrangell: Mr. and Mrs. John Dunn; for Petersburg: Gertrude Davis, Joe McLain; for| Tulsequah: T. W. Hill, E. Haug, R.| Johnson, George Robinson. | For Skagway: Finley McGres,| Harold Moats; RPv. Armstrong, Tom Dyer; for Haines: W. C. McDonald. | Arriving from Skagway were: Nancy Leeper, David L. Stevenson, | Lt. Willam H. Finegan; from| Haines: Larry Lindstrom, C. W. Kernes, George Mammert, Mrs. C. W. Kerns, Ed Eastman, Ambrose Abbott, Jack C. Means, Pickering, Chester Loop, R. H. Gar- vin, But Phelps, E. F. Graves. From Tulsequah: Morris Pet- erson, Charles J. Parker, William Burmeister, Andrew Scott, Michael Bermel, Glen Scholler, Walter Gal- loway, Michael Scoretz. From Ketchikan: Fannie Mc- Daniel, from Petersburg: J. McLean, A. Norheim, J. L. Martinsen; from Sitka: Mr. and Mrs. Roy Graver, Mr. and Mrs. Woody Davis, Lois Miller, Shirley Mellinan, E. Rirk- ovich, R. Peratrovich, Myrth Sar- vela, Carol Balyes; from Fish Bay: Al Keithly. MARRIAGE LICENSE Application for a marriage li- cense was made yesterday to the U. S. Commissioner by Lucius B. Keller, fisherman, and Agnes J. Phillips, canneryworker. Both are Juneau residents. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Robert | f{aberg, Merle Strickland, Wil-| |liam Samato, R. H. Severine and Wwill be in the United Kingdom by, Mildred Hermann. H. W. Guemher‘ came in from Annette. | Thirty flew south. A, D, Earler went to Annette. Cledamae Cam- mock went to Ketchikan. Seattle-bound passengers were: Aaron Wise, Shirley Millman, Lois | Miller, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Ran- some and Robert, Mr. and Mrs. R. Brust, Ed Eastman, George Munnert, Joe Meherin, E. E. Deite, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kerns, David Tyree, W. F. Galloway, M. T. Scosete, Harriet Penwell, Myrtle Sahvela, Myer Lurie, Carl Swen-] son, George Williamson. O. C. Dwyer, Mr. and Mrs, C. M. Wynn and Judy, Paul Harvey, and Tony Blake. HERE TONIGHT The prospect of spending tonight in Juneau was pleasing to three | members of a crew of a plane | sent here from Elmendorf Airbase | to pick up Washington, D, C.-bound ‘uuvu-nmm( officials. They "were: | capt. Don Wilson, Jr.; Capt. R. M. Parker and Lt. G. T. Lewis who were stormbound at Gustavus last ( night. They will pick up Gov. Ern- est Gruening and party and take off for Anchorage where the party i { Washington, BRADYS GO SOUTH Frank Brady, of the mechanical | department of the Daily Alaska | Empire, accompanied by his wife and baby, left on the Princess ! Louise for the states. They will visit his parents in New Jersey | then go to Pennsylvania where the | parents of Mrs. Brady will be vis- | ited. He expects to return to Ju- | neau within several weeks and Mrs. | Brady will return next spring. | Your Deposits ARE BUY and HOLD SAVING W e o i bank is pledged to conscrva tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank. is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation, which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to & maximum of $10,000. SAFE UNITED STATES S BONDS ot DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION will be transferred to a DC-4 rur| H A ‘ . |long ordeal in seas where a com- | An announcement said the units ponion perished. Four other men reached shore | early winter. About 1600 men Will ‘st night, exhausted and chilled, | be inyolved, after the seiner Delmar crashed Three B-29 bomber groups based into rocks on the west coast of in England share five former Royal #rancouyer Island. | Air Force bases with U. Si fighter | ope pon “povever ot last re- 0;‘:‘5’: :{’d re:ei;c(r“;ow::erx‘-m‘:g ports was hanging from the boat's gLoups, P g , corkline in the cold water off Car-| fround“m‘:ee \_mi:: Loy ;l)n d_'”i;’ 93 manah lighthouse, about 75 miles ar as is known here, the air ases‘fmm Victoria. have no anti-aircraft protection. | Darkness closed in, preventing his rescue. | | The drowned man was identified | { by the R.C.AF. as Harry Martinick, | 6 TO ANCHORAGE, ‘ | 9 ARRIVE ON PNA [<0..c. Nome”oc "t oiner coew | imembers were not known. | Six flew to Anchorage yesterday | _ | on Pacific Northern Airlines and | MRS. FELIX GRAY WILL | nine arrived from the westward. SPEAK AT MARY CIRCLE From Anchorage: D. Neeley, How- ! | ard Denton, Ralph Westover, Charl- es Keil, Vincent Yadao, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Paulin and daughter, Jeanette. W. Guiden arrived from Cordova. Outbound were: U. C. Nelson, Howard Francis, Galen Hunt, Hugo Guenther, Arvid Norheim and Mrs. Scott Murphy. Mrs. Felix Gray, will be the guest | speaker at the meeting of the Mary | Circle of the Northern Light Pres. | byterian Church next Tuesday at| 8 pm. A travelougue of her trip abroad, particularly of her visit to Scot- land, will be given by Mrs. Gray. RFC MAN HERE FAIRBANKS VISITOR Hugo W. Guenther of the RFC Charles B. West of Fairbanks' office in Seattle is at the Baranof is registered at the Baranof Hotel | Hotel. —— ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Pelershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient. afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 SCOTTISH RITE TEMPLE Saturday, Nov. 4th-10 P. M. For All Stars, Masons, and Their Invited Guests Semi-Formal SPECIAL PRIZES Cards for those whodon't dance Music by Manson's Band Admission: $1.25 plus tax pangs of conscience. Shapiro said the woman admitted | heating coins in a pan and offer- | ing them to the children after they | were invited into her house to sing | while she prepared a “treat.” Koreih—A;émbly Will Not Confirm President Rhee SEOUL, Nov. 3—#»—The Republic of Korea National Assembly refused today to confirm President Syngman Rhee’s appointment of Paik Nak Choon as a premier. The vote against Paik was 100 to 21. Other opposition to Rhee's ad- ministration was expressed in a petition demanding the resignation of the entire cabinet. Signed by some members of the Assembly (number not reported), the petition blames Rhee’s cabinet for the war. FROM HAINES Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Lindquist of Haines are registered at the Baranof Hotel. Jun AT LOWEST FIGURE | INPAST TWO YEARS, |KAKE CANNERY TO CAN | (RAB THIS WINTER T0 UP EMPLOYMENT The old P. E. Harris cannery at Kake owned by the organized vil- lage of Kake is expected to be ready to can crab by November 15, according to Arthur H. Walker, ] credit officer for the native re- j sources division of the Alaska Na- tive Service. Buildings are about ready for the installation of equipment now in Petersburg enroute to the cannery. The cannery will operate as leng as weather permits the catching of crab by four or five boats. Approxi- mately 25 or 30 will be employed at the cannery including the boat crews. William S. Olson is cannery manager. The canning of crab at the can- nery is to supplement salmon can- ning in an effort to supply employ- ment to as many people in Kake as possible. Trolling for king salmor by the native boats at Kake is good reports Walker. The salmon is being sold to the cold storage at Peiers- burg. The village has been operating the cannery for the past year. FROM BARGE Mr. and Mrs. Roy Grover of Barge are stopping at the Hotel Juneau. War Rehearsal in interior Alaska By Mmy-(ivilians, FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Nov. 3—(® —Residents of Fairbanks will have a rehearsal this month of the roles they will be expected to play in the event of an enemy attack on interior Alaska. Plans are being prepared for a series of maneuvers to coordinate civilian defense measures with those of Big Delta, and the Ladd and Eielson Air Force bases. Details have not been disclosed. FROM TACOMA DRUG Merle Strickland, of the Ta- oma Drug Co., Tacoma, is in Ju- aeau ab the Baranof Hotel, FRO™M SITKA Clarence Moy of Sitka 1s ’ing a: the Baranof Hotel. ztnp- TROM INIAN ISLAND Mr. and Mrs. Douglas R. Reed of Inian Island are at the Hotel Juneau. Nancy Leeper of Skagway is re- gistered at the Juneau Hotel. Charles Thompson of Sitka is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. I've got news for you: Bar-B-Qued Turicey | with all the frimmings SUNDAY | beginning at 6 P. M. | LAURA LEE'S BARBQ | ghby - 318 Willou | Fii) 1 Winter Excursion Rates FARES T0: Ketchikan 1 REDUCED Petershurg Wrangell Save an Additional 1% on Round Trips Look At eau-Ketchikan Juneau-Pefershurg - - 14.50 Juneau-Wrangell - - - 16.00 Reductions on Air Cargo Rates Too New Winter Excursion Rates Effective Nov. 1st, 1950 Qlfifim% erving | ‘Sour Mash is to bourbon'. \what sterling is \to silver. And 'Old Fitzger=d, {Kentucky's First Sour Mash \Bourbon, is your _sfierling key to genuine whiskey 'enjoyment. i /4 HIZGERALD ZGenuine SOUR MASH Bourbon® OLD FASHIONED | 1100% BONDED 'KENTUCKY {STRAIGHT 'BOURBON WHISKEY — {100 PROOF orted Tweeds Topcoats - Suits - Sportcoats 1 Samuel Martin, Ltd. ‘ kg | Exclusive at Caslers Mens Wear - Phone 962 | 25Tieo auo s0110 Lo, u °l"""'ltl‘ peteer g ed in Bon STITZEL-WELLER DISTILLERY Est. Lovisville, Kentucky, 1849 _ Pl e s g eI ) Distributed by ODOM & COMPANY Seattle, Washington WANT ADS BRING RESULTS 20% 4 This! 2500 45.00 26.10 28.80 (Plus Federal Tax) @« @ » IRyAcS