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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1950 & CHRISTMAS SEALS NOW IN MAIL FOR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA The local chnpter purchased MATANUSKA TO GET PAN AMERICAN MOVES | ACTIVITIES OF ACCA 3. im MACHINE DOES ALL % TRAVELERS THURS. "pepopTED AT MEET " sewia™™ ™ ™ \m‘. s Hospital, “Pig” Containers | Douglas High School and the Unl- | versity of Alaska where she met | her husband. The Mahans were married in Seattle and moved, during the war to Honolulu where Mahan is .'m‘ ‘The Joker Shouted PAGE THRER rof this post is a newspaper clip- ping with a huge headline: “Ameri- ans due to leave Korea by Christ- Louder than Wordsl'"::;n,d ot 0 e o deck of cards. | engineer. The new son in the fam-| A U.S. FIRST CAVALRY DIVI- b1 i Thirty-nine passengers weré car- JUNEAU RES!DE‘“IS EXCEPI M".K (ow ried yesterdny on Pan American| At the regular ‘meeting of the Pete Warner, chairman of the ¢ B World Airwi Ten arrived here | Board of Directors of the Juneau- COmmittee in charge of placing; Christmas Seals are now In the | mail for the residents of Juneau, Mrs. Frances L. Paul,’ executive Secretary of the Alaska Tubercu- Com- losis Association, announces. mittees from the Kiws which sponsors the sale a Lusiness houses of Juneau, just about completed their canvas with an excellent record When President Truman bough! the first Seals of the nation-wide | sale on November 20 he issued the | following statement: “Tuberculosis I of more than 5,0000f in the past 50 years. “Tragic as this figure is, it wou have been worse if the Americar people had not banded together to fight tuberculc They formed the National Tuberculosis Asso: tion in 1904 and launched & wide campaign against th ease. Since then, the TB rate has been cut 85 per I am informed that tu today leads all diseases as a cau of death in the age group from to 35. | “The progress already made is| preof that further progress can b made and will be made, with the continued’ cooperative effort of the American people. One way of showing we are nd the anti-; tuberculosis campaign is to use Christmas Seals, sold annu to support the work cf the N d the 3,000 state and local veolu associations now affiliated w ‘First sold in this country ia 1907, the Christmas Seal has be-! come a symkol of th2 people fight to eradicate tuberculosis. T hast that day, I hope the Al 1 people will be generous th y season in their purchace of Christmas Seals.” | The Alaska Tuberculosis ciation carries on a year campaign in the Territory. activities being supported by their cnly money raising the mail and Health Bends. Directors consisting of 50 m f'om ska is-the goverr ciation, an Executive mittee of members resident in Juneau. M. O. Johnson is the Puwdun ol th it. ssociation d James n is the Tr of the Executi mittee are Dr. Cl n. C. 1 John Maurstad, Mrs. Lee Dunian Mrs. Kate Smith, Mrs. Chris Wyi- ler, Mrs. Earl Hunter, Jr., and J B. Burford. “Great care is taken every year to revise and add to the mailin list. We hope people will overlook it, however, if they should receive a duplicate set of Seals Paul requests. Mrs. Paul Seal Sale receipts from all the Territory are now 2 office with better than sults. . also stated that the over BARANOF TO START SUNDAY DANCING, SPECIAL DINNERS | Sundays in Juneau will take on| new interest, with an innovation in the Baranof Hotel Bubble Room, starting immediately. - In response to many roqu»stu from patrons, Sunday ternocn | dancing from 4 to 9 o'clock will be featured, it is announced by Edward J. O'Brien, manager. Original novelty numbers will| spotlight Frank B and John | Goettel, Monday evening dancing will ke discontinued in favoer of | the Sunday feature. | In connection with the new plan, special Sunday dinners will be served in the spacious Gold Room | from 2 to 9 oclock. The regular Sunday dinner menu will also be | available there. H Meals of a short order type will be served in the Bubble Room but Manager O'Brien is frank in poin: ing out the limitation. “We have to charge a 20 perchL[ cxcise tax in the Bubble Roum,”! he said today, so we cannot expect | complete dinner service to becume} 25 popular there as we know it | would be otherwise.” i Couri Awards $1,591 Ifloj‘nju‘red Libby Cock | in- | SEATTLE, Dec. 1—»—For | juries suffered in a fall from a| cannery tender in Alaska, Frank| Mecheelsen, a cook on the vessel, | was awarded a judgment for $1, 591\ vesterday by a jury in Superior | Court. The judgment was against Libby McNeill and Libby, operators of the vessel. Mecheelsen had asked for $11,591. Mecheelsen, 67, said he suffered permanent leg and arm injuries| when he fell from a gangplank be- tween the vessel and a dock at| Moser Bay, Alaska, June 25, 1948. | WILLIAMS RETURNS Secretary of Alaska Lew M. Wil- liams has returned from a short Se:\l- ¥ SEATTLE, Dec. machine to bottle milk tainers was loaded t freighter Coast and six from Fairbanks; throug? From Seattle: Jeanette Dunn, | there were thirteen members pres Matanuska Ve £ A 1 vaz W 3 drava Bishop Gleason, Ray Hope, Rich-|ent. b “. was voted to order “d"“‘l B ok mond and Berth Johnson, Roy M The report by Miss Bess O'Neil!, !l0nal “pigs | Y6 55t Tor Neill, Dryl and Elda Roberts, Wil- membership chairman, showed The TrEssmStinin S Shas | ALl Gme to o Tt was | Hami Re and Mrs. E. Wyres. |total of $846 turned in to date P, reported $467.50 sent to head- | e s Whitehorse: Frank Wilson.|This amount represents 1950-51 (uarters for “Out of Alaska’s B tach & 4 F Fairbanks: R. B. Bolton, | memberships in the ACCA. Of the Kitchens.” These cook books may he ma kes the fiber con- cold " Powen 75 S e purchased from the J. B. Bur- tainers 11 “are flat Harold Devoe, M. F. Powers, John |$1 membership, 75 cents is sent o opes dingl dias "‘ o Adams, John Argetsinger and Rosie | to the Territorial headquarters o d C‘y‘"“”"“-_‘_ Baranof * Oigar foiA o s sk e " | John, | Anchorage for matching tunds from | Sténd, Val Poor’s and Feusi and| C e them v | Jensen in Douglas and Douglas Annette: Mr. For th mill caps a wire around the Charles Ryan. [Eate 0T 45 ool Mrs. McCormick unced tha s to hold dbala BIRee or Ketchikan: May Harlow and |local chapter fund which is use . eathe h“ b;en"‘::‘gué‘;cb “f The aska Stearnship Co./ ves i Bright. for the immediate needs of th ’H.dcm‘dbmflgcmol ~[')‘N EL g ?:1 o] was scheduled to leave this| For Seattle: Roland Armstrong,| children in the chronic diseas |§ i A 1 *;‘} ";“_ i W. Hayes, Ole Twedt, Ethel Krugle- | ward at St. Ann's Hospital end| °f ¢ F_:i R S (S SIS y wich, Anne Peterson, May Maiers, |emergency requests for the Oitho- | <" “l‘l’ i “tht'. A’:‘s BOpmesl, & SEe s e o Nord, Betty Ross, Frank | pedic Hospital at Mt. Edgecumbe. -‘:;. ;‘v“yfl f‘“wk“" : "_‘:“‘e‘[‘“ “l“h)e-} boflvidfon Appeal , Max Behrmann and M.| All children in the Tarritory ¥ 1 Fairbanks Pollte Caplain Resigns; Filed; Bond Pui Up By Fairbanks Man FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Dec. 1—(F cht Club owner Raymond Wright posted $15,000 bond yester- he would appeal conviction to the Ninth the As .cmm.l Press) (By from Seattle; one from Whitehorse, three went from Whitehorse to Seattle 118 left Juneau for the south. and Mrs. Penmenl Reason containers for voluntary contribu- | reported on the popularity | of the “pigs to be fed to aid a led ' child” which are at the Elks Club and at Mike's in Doug- Douglas chapter of_ the Alask: Crippled Children’s Association wa held recently at the home of th president, Mrs. John MeCormick tions, ‘The bal the Pederal Government. { tn. Grocery, | | ices of a ACCA paid for the s there. cf the next nounced later. are sufi dition are eligible for care und the ACCA program. A number o ! cases from this area have received |and are receiving treatment. The i‘é’ "he Orinapeds Hoepital i bornc 3IK PASSENGERS our, | by the ACCA. : EIGHT ARRIVE BY PNA Anycne who has not beea con- tacted and wishes to send in the| | Six passengers traveled via Pa-| | cific Northern Airlines to Anchor- | ering from a erippling con- teacher mesting will | $1. membership may do so by mail- ing it to the Juneau-Douglas chan- Circuit Court of Appeals at San Captain Jack Murphy of | ia; Box 1539, Juneau. Francisco. e has resigned in protest| il | age yesterday; five urrxvedJ from | Wright was sentenced to two 1t fine given a merchant For Hospitalized Children | Anchorage and three from Cordova. Jears for illegal possesion of nar- ed to turn out his lights| Reports of the hospital chairman, | #o Ancnorage: ’:‘“;;“"s‘“h".‘“;' coti ree ro- | Qurinig a recent blackout. The mer- Mrs. Leigh Grant and the sewing chum, ichols chwind, cotics, and three years for pro zengemE Al R g chant, curing a female for titution. : His wife, Vernestine was sentenced OBl explained to two yea suspended on a W narcotics charge. 500 MINK PELIS iS LOOT IN BURGLARY ELMA, N. Y., Nov ¢ than 500 mink pelt he makings of at le eight full-length coat: he loot in an Elma bur. Air Force {(aplain FAIRBANKS, Alaska, —An week oil truc teday Dec. he head-on collision of and a cations S . He is survived Louis J. Cherven said the pelts, lued at $19,870, were carted away , was fined | chairmal !(I!!ed Fa"bankSu\ ing been furnished by the Or- 1—p Force Captain killed this| jeep was identified as Capt. Fred T. Dickinson, 3¢, of the Army Airways Communi- who lives at Gary, ieam chfld in the chromc d:sea:e Lundell Mrs. Silva it | showed pajamas, socks, scrap books | Roy H. McNeill. and sewing materials purchased for| From Anchorage: Clara Robison, 111’16 children in the chronic disease | George Karabelinkoff, William Wil- ‘v.ald A report was also made by |Kins, Sammy Ezi and Tom Brown. | Mrs, Zenger that the American! From Cordova: C. D. Tandy, | Legion Auxiliary had made 16 Frank Driscoll and Eilen DeVille. dresses and 10 shirts, the material SON BORN IN HONOLULU ‘fl‘o])?dlc Hospital at Sitka. TO THE RICHARD MAHANS The Board voted $100 to be used for Christmas gifts for the ward at A boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. an St. Ann’s and the Orthopedic Hos- | Richard Mahan at Honolulu on pital at Mt. Edgecumbe. Mrs. | November 27, according to a tele- Grant reported that the Douglas| gram received by Mrs. Rosalia Lun- | Island Woman's Club was giving | dell. by | individual gifts at Christmas to| Mrs. | Mahan is the former Elsa who was graduated from frem his nk ranch early yester- cay after a,cocker spaniel watch- e that “bites before he barks” | BOY BORN TO BAXTERS ated in an office. | Mr. and M Fred Baxter have a | It takes about 60 pelts to make | boy born at 3:10 this morning at| a coat. St. Ann's Hospital. He weighed 5| - ————— | pounds and 4 ounces. Baxter May Harlow of Mercer Island, | ., is registered at the Baranof | ys~here. ‘no' yet been named. ~ IF YOURE 171 34, NOW IS THE TIME FOR AN IMPORTANT DECISION Now is the time to act—to join your hometown National Guard unit. . If America’s need for 'men increases, you’ll be a step ahead by being a Guardsman. Your Guard training will make you a better soldier, with bet- ter chances for promotion. And you’ll be with your own hometown friends and neighbors. If your unit is not called to service, you’ll still be ahead by being in the National Guard. Guard training in many specialist subjects prepares you for better-paying civilian jobs. You’ll learn new skills—and be well-paid while you learn. No matter what the futgre holds, it’s a wise decision to join the National Guard now. Find out more about the many Guard benefits — send the coupon below today! KEEP YOUR GUARD UP! i ool ' ADJUTANT GENERAL TERRITORY OF ALASKA JUNEAU, ALASKA 8% AGE Ve [ | s | £ STREET. J [ cITY. ZONE NO.. STATR e { 3 is | (hic( mechanic \\‘nh Pan American | WHEN YOU GIVE H Perfect for every gift occasion—it's the world’s most-wanted pen! New Parker **51” Pen offers the most bril- -4 liant writing advance ever—the Aero-metric Ink System . . . a new, scientific way to draw in, store, safeguard and release ink. "The new filler is faster, easier. 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