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PAGE TWO SATURDAY CHECK LIST EVERY ITEM LISTED BELOW has been reduced for your SATURDAY CHECK LIST Now, more than ever It Pays to JEWELRY (LEARA" ‘7 Earrings Pearls Shop at Behrends! S07% B Pins Necklaces kers Rhine and gold metallic eS tock Women's lire 150 from our to clear— 7.00 and Chenille Spread: Heavily tufed w m« che m]]v on fine quality. muslin. Contrast- ing colored floral designs. Regular 19.95 and 22.50 regular EE oo Now 8.97 Utility Blankets 100 wool, only, 62x82. or cabin. 314 pounds, grey Ideal for boats or 3.95 ather Fillows 20 x 26, blue and white striped ticking, 100°¢ chicken feathers. 2.25 Boys' Eton Suits Solid colors, two tones, checks Just Bhe thing for spring. Values up to 15.95— Special 5.97 Girls’ Cotton Dresses A large selection from regular stock for your Saturday check list. Reg. 4.50 and 5.50— 3.00 Boys' T Shiris White cotton knit. Saturday check list special. Reg. 1.25— Saturday-47c Boys' Twill Pants Tan only, twill cotton. Sizes 10 and 12 years. Reg. 4.60— Saturday-1.97 Boys' Knit Pajamas Striped tops, solid color lowers. Reg. 3.50— Saturday-1.27 B Rehends Lo RUALITY SINCE /887 YOU'LL ALWAYS MAKE THIS CHOICE KENTUCKY BOURBON KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION « NEW YORK, N.Y. “Uniformly Fine Since 1869 Bracelets tone ilver 19 48 'RAINIERS WIN GAME, 9-3 SCORE By Associated Press If the present trend continues, ‘the Pacific Coast Teague is going to clinch the distinction this year f being the hitters’ paradise. Pitchers are throwing the big, it “nothing” ball in the clutch d the swatsmiths are taking a ehold and aiming for the fences. There were 67 runs scored in last iight's four games. Ogkland scored 1 (that’s right) runs in the eighth nning, tieing up its game with ortland at 13-all, and then put over ne more in the ninth for a 14-13 ecision Sacramento scored nine runs in he last three innings and still lost to Hollywood, 11 to 10 in a game cluttered with 34 hits and five err- ors. Seattle les pitchers for o 3 victory. The only tight ball game was at San Diego where the Padres nosed mt San Francisco, 4 to 3. Joe | itowell’s sirfgle in the ninth pro- iided the winning score. It was the hird in a row for San Diego and kept them in first place in the | standings. Lefty O’Doul’s Seals were glad to get out of the border city |today and the supposedly softer | pickings at Los Angeles. | Oakland’s 11 runs in one inning is not a league record, impressive though it sounds. Salt, Lake made |16 runs in the sixth'against Vernon, August 18, 192811 i Seattle and Los Ahgeles turnac |in their third consecutive lunsrly- |played game, with Seattle winning ;it on the strength of Lefty Jim | Davis' seven-hit pitching. He was | nicked for two of the three runs lin the ninth. | It wa double drubbing for the Angels. They took a severe one at | the box office, Of the 2,000,000 peo- | ple in Los Angeles, only 915 showed lup to see Stan Hack’s club. It was |a cool night and apparently every- hody was at home listening to the radio accounts of the movie Opar awards. clubbed three Los Ang- 11 hits and a ¢ COAST LEAGUE W. L., Pet. San Diego R o r1000 | Seattle . ... gt Cisdntd 1% | Oakland ./l 66’1 Hollywood' } ... ' 867 Sacramento_. 4 333 PACIFIC Los Angeles . s 333 £an_Francisco .000 . Last Night's Results Hollywood 11, Sacramento 10. San Diego 4, San Francisco 3. Seattle 9, Los Angeles 3. Oakland 14, Rortland 13. Sports Briefs Chicago — America’s Golden Glovers beat Europeans, 6 to 2, in International bouts at Chicago tadium. Austin, Tex. — John Marshall, Yale, bettered world record of 18.19 in winning 1,500-meters in NCAA competition in 18:18.8. FIGHT DOPE Philadelphia — Terry Moore, 160, Baltimore, outpointed Bee Bee Wright, 155, Harrisburg, Pa., 8. Brooklyn — Carmine Fiore, 144 New York, stopped Snl Revera, 142, Peru, 5. Flint, Mich. — Emhriel Davidson, 204, Detroit, stopped Joe Wainberg, 208, Chelsea, Mass., 10. MOTHER-IN-LAW OF PERJURER NABBEL ON ARRIVALIN N. Y. NEW YORK, March 30 —(#—Mrs. Elizabeth Moos, former mother-in- law of convicted perjurer William W. Remington, was taken intc custody on arriving here by plane from France. She is accused of fail- ing to register as a foreign agent She was one of five officers of the former Peace Information Cen- ter. The four other officers have been placed under $1,000 bail each on the same charge. Mrs. Moos was taken before U. S Commissioner Edward E. Fay in Brooklyn and released on $1,000 bai' pending arraignment in Washing- ‘on, D. C., Federal Court on Mon- day. Remington recently was sentenc- ed to serve five years on a chargc hat he committed perjury in deny- ng before a grand jury that he ever was a Communist. Whales which reach a length of 100 feet and a weight of 200 tons arc nammals. The sharks are believed to be the ‘argest fish, some species reaching 1 length of 60 feet. Portland’ . - *.333; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ' COMMUNICATION HiGH DIGNITARY == e Juneau, March 30, 1951. Editor, Alaska Daily Empire:— We have all read with great in- terest the new Reorganization Bill and its implications, the rights of the people to elect their own treas- urer and auditor taken away from them, a new board installed to administer the Territory of Alaska which is composed of all office- holders and not chosen by the voters for this specific purpose. We read of the Governor stating he did not want to be on any board of administration, only to find him now the chairman of all boards. We find the Legislature wasting time and money to repeal laws to take him off the boards only to put him back again. We find the treasurer of the Territory, Henry Roden, advocat- ing the passing of the law to create the office of Finance Commissioner 5o he himself can be appointed to the job, at a salary of $15,000 per year or twice as much as he re- ceives as Treasurer. We find members of the Alaska Legislature obtaining appointments on the board of administration when they passed a Senate bill No. 16 a week or so before prohibiting them and the Governor from serv- ing on any boards, and it is also in the Organic Act. But to get the bill passed the sop of putting members of the legislature on the boards promoted no doubt their ego to vote for the bill. We find finally the appuimmoml-“ of the aged Henry Roden, approxi- mate the $15,000 position of Finance Commissioner and a glowing pub- licity report given out as to his qualifications. “I''find no banker, inyestment breker, or any with finance experi- ence on the hoard, and I do not for a minute in review of Mr Roden’s record think he had any. We read that Mr. Skinner is ask- ing for a raise in freight rates and points to the high cost of gov- ernment of the Territory of Alaska as to why a raise should be ex- tended to the Alaska Steamship Co., which makes the Territorial Government, in a measure accord- ing to this statement, a pattern for raises to promote higher cost of living in. the Territory brought atout by passage of such illegal worthless bills as the so-called Re- | organization bill. This was passed and promoted to take away' the] rights of the people of Alaska to| build a bigger and greater machine of political strength, and on the theory the people and . yot havé no sense anyway and are not fit to govern themselves. The relief is at the polls in 1901, and such senators as Anita Garnick, Dr. MacKenzie and others, if they de not choose to run, should be left to attend to their private enter- prises, which they are now attend. ing to, and allow ghe voters and taxpayers to have someone that will attend to the duties they are elected for. In the meantime, let us hope the courts will pass upon this*mon- strosity. lSlgned) ALBLRT WHITE. (QLLECTION wilL EXPAND MISSION WORK, 50. AFRICA Expansion of Seventh-day Ad- ventist medical and educational work in South Africa will be made possible through a special foreign mission offering to which member: of the Juneau Adventist !lnu'('t will contribute Saturday, M: according to E. L. Broder, P: The offering, which will be in all Adventist churches in North America, is expected to reach $250, 000 of which $40,000 beyond reg ular budget requirements is ear- marked for special projects in Af- rica, age 175, being appointed to| ’ | Mc bl; th da hi: m; Ur of § New buildings for two training schools—one in Angola and one in the Congo—and Malamulo Hospi- tal in Nyasaland, will make it pos- oble to train additional African workers so that they can help their wn people. Seventh-day Adventists are now operating 10 training schools for the education of teachers and pas- tors as part of this program of self- help. Medical aides are being train- ed in 9 hospitals. Malamulo Hospital, located at the denominations’s largest mission station in Africa, operates one of six Adventist leper colonies which wre able to care for 725 patients A sister of one of our Juneau mem- oers returned in January after a five year nursing assignment at Malamulo Hospital, In answer to queries how our mall Juneau church can carry on ur advertising and programs, John Griffin, Treasurer of the Alaska Mission, has furnished the 195( Seventh-day Adventist Denomina- ion offering schedule. Total tithe and offering coniri butions was $$44,745,570.00. This it 1, worldwide per capita gift of 362.45. Members in North America nade a per capita gift of $138.27 and our per capita Alaska Mission :ontributions was $228.40. An acute shortage of sheepher- ders is said to be a major factor in the decline of wool and lamb pro- duction of the United States. an. D, hip nd party will be held in the erwarcs in the leaving tod isit in Juneau, Dr.|States. Capt. He Monmouth, N. J., amp Gor Evans, Mrs. ans and Dr, Jack- man are visiting the work of the Preshyterian Church in Alaska, go- ng as far north ds Point Barrow will also visit Barter Island, Fairbe s and Anchorage, and just prier to coming to Juneau will at- tend the meeting of the Presbytery at Palmer, ected to arrive onday, via P2 directl; to S way and where they will spend the and return to Juneau on 7. From Juneau, on Wednes- will fly to Sitka and to Klawock, to of the Pre ORESBYTERIANS, HERE NEXT WEEK The two of Delta where tt loctrination and f Alaska procedures. and go Haine from there bytery (HORAGE ARTIST | PRESENTS PAINTING, | TERRITORIAL MUSEUM i et \ 5 addition to exhibits in the Rev. Ivan Evans, D. D, | Territorial Museur a derator of the General Assem-|painting by Miss Aznes Gouge, su- of the Presbyterian Church in|pervisor of art in the Anc U. S. A., will visit Juneau Tues- | Public Schools. April 3. He is accompanied by| The painting, ife and the Rev. J. Earl Jack- | hibited by Mss Secretary of the Alaska |recent Art and Crafts I b, & National Missions |a stylized picture of Mendenhall howing a patch of lupine ound. gouche horage one of Gouge at Juneau’ P T 7 ~...4 Il A Board of e A A e A e the Church. Tuesday, a fellow- of Dr. Eva din- | the ' museurn Mist and the Mendenhal room of the Memorial Pre electidd B} Church. Reservations for | opator. was cb ner may be made with the | oo At 6 p.m, on dinner in honor Walter ARMY OFFICERS RETURNING TO STATLS late " At 8 pm. on 1 1l speak in cshyterian Church, The rdially invited to hear th dignitary of the Pre and to attend William E. Hs b | Jr., (" the U rrived in 'J Capt. Lynn W. ENis ignal Corps, who a wrch, he t of *| think you'll like Schlitz hest,to0” SCHLITZ has a distinctive flavor all its own. So many people prefer the taste of Schlitz to that of any other beer that they have made jpiweduzg Qemt in the world. We know your way around Alaskal For 18 years Pan American has been flying the Alaska ..., skyways...carried more than two hundred thousand passengers. Our flight crews know their routes backwards and forwards. They know their planes, know their jobs. Dependable service, frequent service. Daily Clipper flights to Seattle from Ketchikan, Juneau (connections to Anchorage) and Fairbanks. Two flights weekly to Whitehorse and Nome. Yes, the Flying Clippers are your best way to get around Alaskal For reservations, just call.., 4 Baranof Hotel Phone 106 N AMERICAN Worrp AIBwAYs WORLDS MOST EX PER!E!\CED AIRIINE The Beer that made Miiwaukee Famous Copyright 1950, itz Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. STURM LOCKER SERVICE 10 E’“‘"E will be continued withou! inferrup! We wish to announce thai pat he taken care of in our new location. Groun: this week. A new modern Locker Fla the corner of Sth and E Streets, and a regarding iis progress. Meanwhile i WE ARE