The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 23, 1951, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE TWO e e e - | sames Wells, Deering; Stanley Mc- | 000 to more than 800 American in- L. A. ARCHITECT HERE | cutcheon, Anchorage; George Mis- 20 pER E 70-MILE-AN-HOUR (H u R( H I ll dividuals and organizations. The| Adrian Wilson, prominent Los ; | covich, Flat; William Egan, Val- ceremonies were held in a flag-| Angeles architect, arrived here 9 |dez, and Mike Stepovich, Fair- { | wIND lASH Es AT draped hall not far from the hal- erday from Seattle to spend two ' banks. u lowed grounds where General|days conferring with Federal Hous- George Washington and his soldiers Administration Director C. C. By BOB DE ARMCND e e e T T P BT * |got into it, the first having been Twenty-second of 7 Series | Sveaker of the House, and in 19157, F. Baronovich of Ketchikan, in Boy Scouts of America for its|housing projects there and also a 4 he returned and was again chosen|1933. And the Territory has yet to N(E CORDOVA, Alaska, Feb. 23.—(P- International Jamboree at Valley(large apartment house for the Earnest Bilbe Collins, who has Spe: r. He is the only man twice |elect its first Alaska-born woman | Cordovans were busy today repair- & ‘Fargc on the theme “Strenghtening | ~!2ska Railroad at Whittier. He been elected to head the Grand|elected to that cifice in the Alaska|to the Legislature. | ing damage caused by the season’s the Arm of Liberty.” ($1,000). dre.” the plans for the Architect's Igloo of the Pioneers of Alaska | 1 egislature. | worst wind and snowstorm, 5 e Weirton (V7. Va.) Chamber of |Building, New Chinatown and e e o years,| o e came back to the House| The average age of the members| WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 —(p— | Dozens of electrical circuits were LONDON, Feb, 23 —(# - Wiiston | commerce fo- ¢vganizing and con- | several hospiteis in Los Angeles. He has been a resider \eain in 1019 and in 1921 he served |of the 20th Senate, we find, is 49| Steel for passenger cars and other | torn down as gale winds upwards of g’o‘:":fih”(] (‘f“}':"‘“ 1“1"“,““ m_‘fl“. ‘]‘:; d:nlc;i:‘l)g an “Americanism Week.” | is stopping at Baranof Hotel. se of Commons tods r the| (1,000). g Division for 47 yea L in the i:;‘_.’*hp“ “:)‘(’I‘H K e or. | he had been admitted to the Alas- |est member is ;xs and n;]e olde:t,| 20 per cent during the second quar- | this Prince William i-"\mfi b“flu g | Bominaton o A aval Torces cf |, Tournament of Roses Committee,| FROM SE/TTLE B0 15 tiat ares, ‘mostly of ka Bar and in Nov 1221, he|is 73. And they have, on the aver- | ter of this year below the average cofrn B i oats bobbl {58 hyorth Atlantic Treaty Natibns Pasndena, Calif., for the 1950 Rose| L. W. Willims of Seattle is re- B ook # resigned his senate t ani was|age, lived in Alaska for 33 years| quarterly level of the first half of like corks in the il boat hap Seiz : to harass | PATAde dedicaied to “Our Ameri- [ ¥stered at the Baranof Hotel : S named special IInited |and seven months, with a range of | 1950. e fishing boat snapped its [ Seizing an opportunity WIASS| . o, Heritage.” (31,900). R ST Ex-Senator C States Attorney for the Four h Di-[16 to 60 years, The reduction program, announc- | "orings, but was recovered. ,P“mc Minister Attlee, ”_“ :r«:rx” National Commitine for a Free RUMMAGE known as “E. B." I vision, a position he Leld unti! 1°33.| Members of the House average|ed by the National Production Au- T T e leader asked, | amid CHOSHS, ‘T\"\|Elll‘01‘,t‘. for its “Cru-ade for Free- | pethodist < ek ‘:M‘Er. ber of the Pioneers He then opened a general law Hn little younger than the Senators— | thority (NPA), will apply to radic | 7 . |there not a British Admiral capa-| gom» program designed to counter- AAA:L1<J<1:5~V~AAuth. Sat., b, 24— years and for the p practice as a member cf (he { r of [47 years and eight months—but fand television sets, washing ma- SrGWder Ex-(ommle ble of discharging these functions? ' ,.; s~viet propaganda. ($1,000) G 1p=5 has been vice presic Collins and Clasby the range of ages is greater—27|chines and other household appli- I The uproar, in the coursee Of ik 4 PRI e R = 5T SRR 4 Grand Igloo He is Johr He was mayor of sk iriyears to 75 years. And they have,|ances, furniture, utensils and s l d l I A whic.h even anrwr members shot 1hi Bl f;\.hl GILLNETTERS MEETING Reck of Juneau a i- | terms, from 1635 | 1930, ond|on the average, not lved quite so number of other products. ead ef, S 10 d @§ | untriendiy questions at the Prime | FEE L SEC Ofr ];\?’ e e 06 S R dent in 1946 was ¢ elected to the|long in the Territory as have the, NPA officials said average quar-| Minister, came as Attlee ;u\‘nuu‘mcd - 0! otel. L. Hall, Peafe nttenjd;dw—zfln Born i Farmland, Randolph Territorial Senate, serving in the | Senators—only 32 years, —Longestterly passenger car production duz-.lown De‘ense I_awyer fie Adantic Pach Defenss Gbmn- 0900000090069000896000000800000000000000000000 County, Inlia: on July 19, 1873, 1947 and 1949 session. About a year | residence for a House mc=mber is|ing the first half of last year was | lisee hag, apritnates, SIS Adm‘i F he moved to California as a boy. | ago he retired from the practice of |55 years; shortest, 5 yeas. about 1,550,000 Manufacturers will Wiiltgm N, Feclitelet i be Bupfens F graduating from high school at law and he ond M be Hinited 4 80 XIef Gent ot thie ateed | By Associated Press Allied Commander at Sea. Fechtel- A l E C 1‘\ U R E AT s ¢ ; et ;i The man who once headed Amer- |er, 54, now is commander in chief - 4 B Chico lm.\x g on to the e | make their home F ' E . ' ‘:)hat went into these cars. They will | ...« communist party —Farl Bro of the Atlantic fleet Normal School and to the study some 75 mile e fr a s i i — ¥ - of law, After he received his degree | Mr. and Mri. Colns ] Irs Xpel'lmell thi;‘:;;ffl?}';y“;;‘:“y cars with der—is visiting Washington court-| Churchill, fiercely proud of Brit- dcvoted te the he entered the office of Col. Park Juneau a few days before tve spens Kid 0 r By DEbBRAR MbA . | F00s - teee (Gays, Browder ) Mahs | 8 B8 POy, SRGH questioned the | Henshaw, a famous California at- ing of the Grand Igloo sessicn and nev pera Ion istrator, announced the program at| o At his owi Hefose atiorngy jadigricn, NEVES ; Y00t BERIRS S!'ld' af M ! '. 2 torney of that day, and when he plaz ‘o spend a week in the capital, | £ _ ysg |2 news conference. ) - | 8k Il ORI or CHtSHIN R A submarines. Yy CLaP ys'cs was 22 he was elected to his first |visit'us with ol :nds and tak- Falls Io Save ll'e He said it is designed to SI«VF‘OF Congr6§s. A reporter apottcd‘hnm It lsvm?t puag\l?lv for one coun- public office—Justice of the Peace ing in i few of icrs of the about a million tons of steel for de-:'?k L.!_z:,l‘r,lval g um(,::\ artbinhl sy _to ,m‘mt o o ,.“'Cm‘l” o i? —which he held for four years. |20th Legislature. fense and defense-supporting I)X.O-‘Lh.\ILLk vith the same olr particular command, Attlee de- —n During the War with Spain, PHILDELPHIA, Feb. 23 —IP-—A | duction. ——r e clared. B Collins enlisted in the 8th Califor-| Tie reai Goid T sh ploneers—|¥oman whose blood stream was| Fleischmann said it will still per- RECK FAMILY HOLDS ! : hMurJorledM;mll)'en Meeks, B. S, D. D., who arrived February 13th aboard the Ten sessions of the Alaska Legis- lature rolled by before a native son THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA STEEL CUT IS Senate. Meanwhile, in 1915, | years and nine months. The young- | consumer durable goods will be cut (RDOVA HARBOR hour 70 miles an ripped through STARTS ROW nomination of an American Admir- | spent the bitter winter of 1776. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1951 les. Wilson is enroute to An- Some of the top awards went to: | chorage ‘in connection with several channeled into a kidney taken from [ mi; continued production of con- the body of a traffic accident victim | sumer durable goods at very high Baranof from Los Angeles, California, nia Volunteers, but he did not get the men, that is, Wil came to the REUNION IN JUNEaU " With the arrival of Mrs. Do!'othyi“. AIlANI'( TREATY overseas. A few years later he mede | North during the big excilement of [ E | a trip to the new mining camp of |1897 -1904have disappe.red from | died today eight hours after an un-|levels — “in most instances, at Green from Fairbanks on yester- | is here at the invitation of local people Fairbanks with tr. intention, as|the Alaska Legisit s 20ty | Precedented experiment 0 Durify | levels never attained before 1949 0%V’ Pan American clipper the interested in Metaphyics. It i : 2 gisls i tlis 2 § g 9 4 L aphyics. It is her with so many othi- of staying ' session her blood and save her life, and 1950 pioneer Reck family of Juneau is > purpose to establish the Center of Uni- only a short time. Thelr abience Trom the Jebline] . EHe ill-fated experiment failed | holding a reunion here this week. | a4 IT t}{ 43 4 Hitaacs s > | shortly after noon. The kidney [ Mrs. Green is the eldest daughter ‘BOMENATED NA"CNS' versal Truth where all races and creeds . may come to share their thinking on the But the mining bug gct him and he stayed on, engaging in placer mining and taking an active part in local political affairs. On Octo- ber 3, 1912, the Democrats, Repub- licans and Progressives of the Fairbanks area held a joint meet- ing and nominated a full ticket Alaska’s first General Election, known as the Non-Part- Collins was ted ued it wa isan Ticket by the Republicars and on Novem- e by the voters as Representatives ber 5 was cho: one of the four from that Divisicn On tne same ticket with Collin: were Henry Roden, now Treasurer tf Alask: and Dan Sutherland later Delegate in Congress and now tive halls and chambers is sudden, too, for in the 19th Legislature, two years ago, we had Andrew Nerland, E. B. Collins, Charles D. Jones and Almer Rydeen, all of whom came north on the gold trail before 1904. But to replace the old Sour- doughs, this Legislature has more members who were born in Alaska than any previous session. The 20th Senate has six Alaska- born members. They are, with their places of birth, Howard Lyng, Sand Point; Elton Engstrom, Wrangell; Steve McCutcheon, Cor- dova; Percy Ipalook, Barrow; John Butrovich, Fairbanks, and William Beltz, Bear Creek. On the House side the Alaska- | was removed from the body of | Wayne H. Deveney, 30, of York, Pa., | killed before 4 a.m. today. Less than an hour later the blood of the woman patient — identified by Frankford hospital doctors as Mrs. Richard Irvine, 32, Philadel- ! phia — was flowing through the ! | borrowed kidney. { | Robert E. Nicholson. managing | director of the hospital, said it] | was the first time in history the technique was used on a humanj being. | Mrs. Irvine was the mother of three children. | | FROM MT. EDGECUMBE p R ES I D E " T MAY of John Reck, prominent Juneau business man and chairman of the MOVE FROM WHITE HOUSE T0 SENATE By Associated Press) Some of the President’s friends| are say'u, today that Mr. Truman | may try to get back into the senate | —instead of the White House—in 1952. This would mean running again Missouri Republican Senator James Kem. | The President spent ten years in | the senate before his election as| vice president in 1944. He has often | Board of the First National Bank. Mr. and Mrs. Armond Duncan, formerly in business in Juneau and now residing in Ketchikan, arrived he yacngest member of the Reck ly. They are being welcomed to the family home by John Reck, their sister Miss Mamie Reck and brother William Reck, who reside here, and by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hurley and their sons Rcbert John and Ra mond Leroy, son - in - law and daughter and grandchildren of N Green and by Mr. and Mrs. Steve Sheldon and their daughters Coralie er ‘i:is week. Mrs, Duncan | | VALLEY FORGE, Pa., Feb. 23— | /P—Gen. Omar N. Bradley said to- day the United States has “ample | | strength” to share with its free-| world Allies until they become “self | sufficient and independent of our aid. ! | And ‘the combined industrial ; | production and skill of the free nations “will assure our military | supremacy if we need it,” the chair; man of the joint chiefs of staff said. | The North Atlantic Treaty or- ganization is a stronger combina- tion than “the compulsory league of Soviet Satellites” Bradley said | in a speech prepared for the Free- | doms Foundation’s annual present- | | | most constructive ways of establishing Brotherly Love and World Peace. o * il i Subject “fn The Beginning ... oo o GOD*»® Gold Room - Baranof Hotel Eleven o'Clock i z i | | living in the East, and these three and Charles D. Jones of Nome born members and their birthplaces Visitors from Mt. Edgecumbe who | called those his “happiest years.” |and Lesley, son-in-law and daughter | €0 ¥ are now the only surviving mem- are J. S. MacKinnon, Juneau;are stopping at the Baranof Hotel ~However, there's nothing official | and grandchildren of the Duncans. |ation of awards for “outstanding G ; Mrs. Green plans to be in Juneau contributions to the cause of free- > are Grace Ushler, Gladys Day,|about the President’s personal plans i Frank Johnson, Kake; Waino Hen- | dom.” bers of Alaska’s First Legislature | . When the Legislature met in|drickson, Juneau; Andrew Hope, | Dorothy Bronsema, and Marjorie and even his friends concede his|at least a month and the Duncans ¥ March, 1913, Collins was named | S ; Frank Degnan, St. Michael; | Ward. |mind may well change. 1i leave Sunday for Ketchikan. The foundation awarded $100- | $8606096068000006600000000000000404 i e e B S B e B oo o s 2 FINAL - READY-TO-WEAR CLEARANCE SALE SAVINGS in WOMEN'S BRESSES i 5.00 10.00 15.00 Ski Jackels Reg. 11951595 Now 1.3 Casuals . . . Dressy Rayons Prints BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT COME EARLY — SHOP CAREFULLY — SAVE MORE BIG Saturday -- Monday PAYS Tuesday -- Wednesday 5 . - ___________._—-—-___’__—————— Money Savmg Values—!'lrsi Floor BAR AGINS G ALOB OUTSTANDING SAVINGS ON EVERY ==\ DVERTISED ITEM Women's Pure Silk Gowns 6.6 each BOYS' WEAR |MEN-€ SUITS = Colors—blue, bll::liuidel;IIJ::\‘tlex\s}lll{t):) i 1 Cleara’nce Prlced REDUCED TO CLEAR 27 00 3 y d NTH Tweeds—Worsteds—Single or Double Breasted Rayon Taffeta Hali Slip - - - 3.47| Boys Sport Suit Tweed coat, solid color Regular 6.95 8.97 Boys' Snow Suils All wool, sizes 10 and 12 4—ONLY 4.7 Boys' Slacks Tweeds and Coverts 2.7 Boys' Sport Shiris | “White Stag” Plaids Regular 6.93 2.77 Boys’ Flannel Bath Robes All Wool » HICKEY-FREEMAN SUITS. 37.00 and 47.00 HICKEY-FREEMAN TOPCOAS. 47.00 Gabardine—Covert—Tweed Regular 90.00 GABARDINE Raincoats 12. Regular 18.50 SPECIAL PURCHASE HATS . . 3.50 GENIUNE FUR FELT Others 8.50 MEN’S KNIT PAJAMAS. 2.77 Reduced to Clear—Reg. 5.90 MEN’S Undershirts Drawers 67e ea. LONG SLEEVE ANEKLE LENGTH MEN’S Specal Price Flounce Bottom, black only. Bed Jackets, 100% Wool - - 347 Regular 11.95 Soft pastel shades. Gosser-Deb Girdles - - 3.47each Priced to Clear NOW—While They Last Sizes 25 to 34. Children’s White Blouse 50% Off Slightly soiled, first quality. INFANTS SPECIALS Little Wool Sweaters - - Now 1.4] Regular 2.95 and 3.95 Snow Suits - - - - - 1.95suit Regular 8.95 Chldren’s sizes — All Wool — Regul:xr 2.77 CLEARANCE—SEW and SAVE—YARDAGE for Women - 5.00 Reguiar 17.95 Sandles and sling styles. Suedes and Calf in assorted colors. SKI SWEATERS i TR qmpers Ele : MEN’S Chenille, fur trimmed, leather soles—Sizes 5 to 13,1 to 3 ds - - - - - 297yd.|Joyce - - - Reducedto Close Out | SKKI JACKET . . REDUCED TO CLEAR SANDLES, OXFORDS, STRAPS, SL‘ING. Regular 5.95 and 6.95 yd. WEDGE HEEL, LEATHER SOLE 77 S . 3.47 Regular 9.95 .« 9.77 Regular 21.50 Poplin Jacket — Wool Lined — Zipper Fastener MWG—WM"M ‘ Ski Panis 0dd Lots NOW 1300 FORMALS NOVELTY 27 ONLY . . Reduced to Clear Sport Swealers . MILLINERY AL§ ;P;?;Egps Tl!)lfif;_,\k Fur Felts . . Complete Selection Reductions 1.50 3.50 6.50 COATS and SUITS FROM OUR REGLUAR STOCK - NOW 25.00 35.00 435.00 Ready Made Drapes, Lined 4.77 ea.| Pure Silk Prints - - - 1.97 yd. | Jerro Shoes Regular 13.95 Beautiful hand screen prints | Reqular 395 and 5.95 Rayon Strutter Cloth - - 1.47yd. | Girls House Plastic Sash Curfains - - - 2.77 Colors—green, tan, blue, grey Drapery Fabrics - - - Tlcyd. Wool Plai Fancy prints—tops for drapes or square LARGE SELECTION . 25 to 50% Off Jackets 25 10 20% Regrouped priced at FAMOUS NAME - TOP QUALITY CLEARANCE — CURTAINS —DRAPES | CLEARANE—SEW and SAVE—YARDAGE Texiron Shower Curlains - 2.77 ea. Tolem (S R Ideal for kitchen or bathroom dance skirts

Other pages from this issue: