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PAGE EIGHT ANOTHER $10,000 ANCHORAGE AREA THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1951 AY LANDINGS WTU POT-LUCK DINNER dings Tuesday totaled and sold at 16 cents There will be a Pot-Luck Dinner mediums, 13 cents for | and regular meeting of the WCTU 35 cents for large. ~ |On Monday, May 28 at 7 pm. at Alaska coast fisheries: | the Northern Light Presbyterian 16,000 pounds, Arctic, 3,- Church, announces Mrs. E. L. Bro- CHILKOOT CREW HERE The crew from the motorship Gruening Offers Advice A In ILWU Strike Threat |stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. ¥: . hey are Steve Larson Homer PARTY FOR 3-YEAR-OLD Mrs. Ethel Davis gave a party at her home for little Geri Ardith | Pannebaker on her third birthday | | Monday afternoon. Geri is the| | daughter of Mrs. Henrie Panne-| TU Halibut | 125,000 |a pound f SOURDOCY SQUARE DANCE The Sourdocy Square Dance club will hold its last regular meeting of the spring season Saturday eve- ning, May 26, in the parish hall, Dancing will begin promptly at 8:30. ]nsumfl:s AGENT * D | FLIES TO COLD BAY ‘Tarlton Smith of Douglas, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, | g, chix a TAXES COLLECTED George Apostol, special assistant, is returning to Juneau Thursday fromr Anchorage, according to At- torney General J. Gerald Williams. Williams said that Apostol has collected an additional $10,000 in delinquent taxes in the Anchorage area. This totals about $40,000 of back veterans, income, school tax and delinquent business license funds collected there in the past ten days. Mrs. Apostol ar are due to arrive in Seattle Friday to here in making tt liams said. ree daughters Juneau from Mr. Apostol ir home, Wil- FIX DATES FOR BUDDY POPPY SALE formulated for 1wide sale of Veterans of Pla are b the 30th annual nati Buddy Poppies Foreign Wars a (Continued from Page One) ing rates by from 20% and general merchandisp by from (19% to 247, to cite two very import- ant items. During this period your company was not only faced with rising costs in general but incurred all kinds of additional costs in the| process of driving the Alaska Trans- portation Company out of business. These circumstances would® distort further the facts you list as to your increased costs, Although I do not like the pros- pect of increased rates, which fur- ther augment the already high liv- ing costs, T am not unalterably op- posed to increases which can be demonstrated as justified fair and necessary. In order to correct the completely erroneous impression cre- ated by your letter as to my position, I will list what I do oppose I am opposed to the concept any and every cost incurred a carrier is a legitimate justification of rates present or proposed, that that ate of May ed for the dis- iar flowers to Comman- Taku Post 26th has been tributi of these fam in Juneau, according J. J. Brunette of 9. in previous years; these sym-i of the fields of Flanders will be sold by a group of volunteer and women, assisted members of the Ladies Aux- of Taku Post ecord sales force of at least women and girls is being organ- The goal for the 1951 Buddy y Sale has been fixed at 3,000 Popp! 2 he money that we col- lect in this sale will remain right here in our own community, to help finance the relicf and welfare work which we have undertaken in be- half of our own veterans in need, and their dependents,” explains Commander Brunette. 4 “The balance of the proceeds of the annual Buddy Poppy sale is us- ed to help maintain the nationwide rehabilitation service of our organ- ization,” Brunette added. “For ex- ample, we contribute one penny for each poppy sold to the opera- tion of the V.F.W. National Home for widows and orphans at Eaton | Rapids, Michigan. This is the only 1s every incompetence of a carrier should be provided for in rates, and that a tieein between a carrier and an industry in which the carrier's owners have a great interest should be ignored in the face of clear evi- dence that an unwarranted rate pre- ference is being paid for by unduly high rates charged to Alaska’s resi- dents and other industries. ! 1 am opposed to the continue: existence of discriminatory rates You have increased the canned sal- mon industry rates upward, as you are fond of telling us of late, but| the discrimination is still not moved. One hundred pércent creases on rate bases which ar basic injustice. I am opposed to disproportion-| ately high rates between Alaska | ports, which handicap the Alaska| shipper who wishes to send com-| modities from one Alaskan port to another, and discriminates against| him in favor of a Seattle supplier.| I have urged such reform in your| rate structure for years. | I am opposed to the automatic | granting of approval by a so-called | regulatory agency of the demands| of a carrier that its tariffs be in-| home of its kind in the world. 1t was founded in 1925. Since then, hundreds of orphans of veterans' have been given the opportunity to | become healthy, self-supporting citizens.” PERSEVERANCE REBEKAH MEETING TONIGHT, I00F A social meeting of Perseverance Rebekah lodge No. 2-A, will be held tonight at TOOF hall. Initiatory degrees will ferred on several candidates, be con- fol- lowed by refreshments served by |of d'rate increase before it is grant- | a copimittee headed by Irma Gey- | ed, not a grant, followed .by an in- er. Main order of business will be a report of the picnic eommittee which is making plans for the an- nual Rebekah picnic. 110 CARRIED ON ALASKA COASTAL TUESDAY FLIGHTS Aldaska Coastal Airlines carried a total of 110 passengers on Tues- day flights with 26 on interport, 31 departing and 53 arriving. Departing for Tulsequah: H. C. Geigerich, A. H. Clark, J. C. Ross, Jack Gordon; for Excursion Inlet: Mr, and Mrs. Peter Johnson, Jack Barney, Vivian Barney; for Peli- can: Stanley Singer, Mrs. John Bostneis; for Port Arithorp: Maxine Lindgard; for Gustavus: B. Mein. For Skagway: Jack Jenkins, Louis Rapuzzi; for Haines: Louise Mil- ness, Roy Drawe, Floyd Jacobs, V. Bullan, Jack Thompson; for Sitka: L. Evans, Bill Carson, Brooks Han- ford, Joe Reber, K. C. Hildum; for Hoonah: Earl Fleming; for Fick | bitrary and unfair practices in any creased without prior investigation of the justice and need for these increases. I would, oppose such ar- {case, but in a highly inflationary i period such as the present I feel it 'm_v duty to do so with even greater Ivigor. “Escrow” is no solution. Rate | increases are pyramided in prices, and price increases beget wage in- | creases, and wage increases beget | further price increases for goods and | services. Stabilization policy alone justifies an inquiry into the merits| quiry into whether the grant ‘was merited. I have petitioned the TFederal Maritime Board for a suspension of the increases which you have re- cently filed and I have requested that hearings and investigations be | conducted as you charge. I fail to see, however, that my insistence upon this leads to your conclusion that by so doing “the basic facts and problems of the trade are ig- nored.” Public hearings, technical investigations . by, the regulatory body, and judicial reviews are the only 'means by which we can get at these “basic facts and problems. They are the only means by which the public is given assurance that! due consideration will be given to the effects of the proposed revisions | upon the interests of shippers and the general public and that the level of rates will be established so as to assure the carrier a fair, just and | reasonable return for his effort and investment. | In view of your repeated public| statements that the increases are justified, therefore, I cannot under-| stand your reluctance to have the matter aired and your position pos- Cove: Walt Klinkhammer, Virgil Klinkhammer, Stan Bowers; for Petersburg: Jack Molynieux, Guy Kessinger; for Ketchikan: Irene Miller. Arriving from Sitka: Dr. Edith Sappington, Margaret Thomas, Henry Smoke, Gordon Nagazruk, Lillian Porter, Sam Mil- lick, Annie Millick, G. Karman, L. Ahmaogok, Terry Sweetsie, Vincent Eakon, Bernice Albert, A. Duyck, Gerald Edwin, Pete Svuadlook, Lorraine Frank, Bertha Surrett, M. Day, Mrs. Tharp, Clyde Maycock, Dr. Moore, F. Relison, A. Rolison, Dr. Karola Reitinger, James Pad- dock, Mr. and Mrs. John QJack- man, Don Neal, D. Belshaw, Dor- othy Whitney, Harriet Rosseler, Mr. and Mrs. Brown; from Fick Cove: ‘Walt Klinkhammer, Virgil Klink- hammer. From Ketchikan: E. J. Jackson, J. K. Johnson; from Petersburg: J. M. Halter; from Haines: Dennis Dundas, Mayo Raney, Carl Byor- R. Dale, stad; from Skagway: Ben Wright,| Marjorie Benson, Genevieve Ben- son; from Hoonah: Helen Houston. From GCustavus: Bernard Mein; from Pelican: Mike Goodman; from Excursion Inlet: Jerry Sampson, Tom Dyer, Arthur Betraborg; from Funter: M. Mein; Katherine James. _ —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— from Hoonah: sibly vindicated through such hear- ings and investigations. Sincerely yours, (s) ERNEST GRUENING, Governor. | WEEKLY WELL BABY, CHILD EEALTH MEET THURSDAY AFTERNOON | Weekly Well Baby and Child Health Conference will be held at the Juneau Public Health Center, 122 Second Street Thursday after- noon from 1 through 3:30. All in- terested mothers in the community are cordially invited to take their young children in to the Health Center to be weighed and measur- | ed, as well as to have a general health discussion with the Public Health Nurse. The Health Center also has a wide assortment of booklets dealing with the various aspects of infant and child care. Interested mothers may phone the Health Center for information re- garding these. The phone number is 218. Mothers whose children may show signs of coming down with the measles, fever, dry cough, draining nose, etc. are asked to refrain from taking them in. FROM FT. RICHARDSON Capt. W. E. Hinds of Ft. Richard- ‘ll is stopping at the Baranof Ho- el CASH AND SAVE - - PAY CASH AND SAVE o S ¢ PAY CASH AND SAVE S o ® .$6 !and Ray Gelotte of | Walter E. Hamilton Stokes of Juneau. to 33 1/3% | will be made within the next few days, said. Sommers Construction Co. on Mar- | ine Way. Cub Scout Pack 311 sponsored by | the Juneau Rotary a meeting Hall treats cubm; € themselves unjust do not change | = « z g ] )] -« -~ « is flying to the Alaska Peninsula Pel today to serve as fisheries agent | at Cold Bay. He will be stationed | .o () k. C there during the fishing season and | 13000 pounds; return to Juneau in the fall, e Haines and and Leonard THe first trip it is hoped, Steve Homer Temporary offices are at the AT BOTEL JUNEAU = D. J. Cedarstrom of Anchorage came in from Seattle on PAA yes- terday and is registered at the Hotel Juneau. CUBS MEET TONIGHT City Council night at 8 o' an ADJUDGED BANKRUPT Willis Wayne James was adjudg- Under ed a bankrupt in U. S. District dinanc Club will hold tonight at the Parish Awards will be presented and provided, Henry Harmon, asfer, said. | George W. Folta. 20th Century Super Market -SHOP HERE SHOP HERE Johnson: sold to E. E. Eng- | has been planned. The public is 310450, 10,500 pounds, Jhne Invited to attend. ¢ 00 pounds, Mabel K., 5,000 Jounds, Augusta, 22,000 pounds. ; S Lt. James Maynard of the Sal- COUNCIL TOMOERGW | vation Army A houseguest for a few days at the tomorrow | home of Lt. Norman Steinig. May- lock at the city dock, hard has been at Klawock for the amendment to an or-| Past two years. He originally comes the council will meet reg- from Billings, Mont. Court this morning before Judge ularly on the first four Thursdays; of each month. There will be a regular Juneau | S e PAY CASH AND SAVE @ S ¢ PAY CASH AND SAVE @ $ @ PAY CASH AND SAVE Hazel S, | meeting " Janette, 43,000 pounds; | der, President of the local WCTU. | A program of music and a film| FROM KLAWOCK —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— | baker. Guests were Nancy and Bonnie Davis, Carl Larson, Kathy | Jéan Peden, Pat Mcore, Duke De- | Coite and Tom George IIL DIVORCE ASKED Glenna V. Hughes filed suit for divorce this morning in U. 8. District | Court against Stanley S. Hughes. } ‘The couple married here on May 25, | 1950. No | volved, FROM EXCURSION INLET A. J. Wingler of Excursion Inlet is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. property rights are in- | ENGELKING BACK R. E. Engelking of Seattle re- turned yesterday from a trip to the westward and is at the Bar- anof Hotel. | —_—— | FORESTER HERE | Mr. and Mrs. James H. Clough | are stopping at the Hotel Juneau. He is with the U. S. Forest Service, FROM NEW YORK Arthur Rubin and Fred Robison of Gloverville, N. Y. are at the Baranof hotel. =Lowest Every Day Skelf Prices in Alaska-~ WAVS ANV HSVD AVA @ € @ ' We are the only true Cash and Carry Super Market in Juneau. That is why you will find our Every Day Shelf Prices the LOWEST IN TOWN. SHOP HERE ANY DAY OF THE WEEK AND SAVE MONEY ON YOUR GROCERY BILL. DELIVERIES BY FOSTER'S TRANSFER Quart MIRACLE WHIP MISSION GRANGE Gallon Jug 75¢ | 5295 SWEET GHERKINS . 49¢ NO. 1 TALL CAN — EXTRA LARGE RIPE OLIVES . . . 39¢ PINT JAR — HEINZ — FRESH CUCUMBER PICKLES . 29¢ LARGE 28 OZ. TIN — S and W BAKED BEANS . . 33« LARGE BOTTLE HEINT KETCHUP . . 3« 303 CAN — EARLY JUNE PEAS . . . . . 15 303 CAN — TASTEWELL — CREAM STYLE ORN ... .. 17 1 FARM FRESH PRODUCE SH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AT ALWAYS A LARGE VARIETY OF FRE;s THE LOWEST EVERY DAY PRICES IN TOWN. VEGETABLES HERE AND SAVE. Pttt e, FRESH — TENDER — ALL-GREEN SHOP FOR ASPARAGUS . . . . .. 25¢lh. AVOCADOS 19cfach FRESH Strawberries Due by Air WED! DAY P. M, FANCY — LARGE Bell Peppers Oclb. LARGE BUNCHES — FRESH Green Onions or Radishes 2 bunches 19« tionally Advertised SWIFT'S BROOKFIELD CHEESE |cAULIFLOWER| 2 1b loaf $1.15 STOCK UP NOW-—AT THIS LOW PRICE 85¢ Drinking Cups Paper Plates Plastic Spoons Plastic Forks — == = First Box — FRESH FROZEN PACKAGE PICTSWEET DRIP OR REGULAR GRIND lh. can Napkins . Sandwich Bags YOUR FRESH CHOICE BEEF. e ————————————— T —— SWIFT’S PREMIUM — TENDER-GROWN — NATIONALLY ADVERTISED FRYING CHICKENS . . . Iowa Pork—Corn-Fed—Rib or Loin End Pork Loin RIBS... - Armour’s — Skinless WEINERS . 59cb. 33« M. J. B. COFFEE 2 Ib. can $1.69 PICNIC SUPPLIES YOU WILL FIND THEM ALL AT YOUR 20TH CENTURY SUPER MARKET Wooden Spoons Drinking Straws Dessert Dishes Hickory Smoked—Half or HAMS . . Whole »c bb. 35¢; for each ALL FLAVORS No Deposit on Bottles SODBA PoOP Case of 24 hotiles $1.65 8 OZ. BUFFET TINS FRUIT COCKTAIL . . R6¢ NO. 2%, TIN — LIBBY'S DELUXE PLUMS LARGE 15 OZ. TINS — CAT FOOD PUSS N’ BOOTS 2 LB. PACKAGE — SEEDLESS RAISINS . 10 LB. SACK — FISHER’S BLEND FLOUR GALLON TIN — IMPORTED FERRARI OLIVE LOWEST PRICES nuum “EAT VAL“ES LOWEST PRICES YOU GET CHOICE BEEF WHEN YOU BUY YOUR STEAKS AND ROASTS AT YOUR 20TH CENTURY SUPER MARKET. . WE SELL ARMOUR’S STAR BUY THE BEST AND PAY NO MORE, 3clb. ROAST . Swift’s Premium—New Cello Sealed Pkg. SLICED BACON. Fresh Ground — BEEF .. additional box, 10¢ GRADE A LARGE COUNTRY FRESH EGGS 69( doz. NO. 2 CAN — LIBBY’'S — FANCY SLICED PINEAPPLE . 35¢ GROUND (IN CARTON) .. 35¢ 2for31c .. $1.05 OlL $5.75 Oclb. " 59cbb. Oclb. 59cib. Lean HAVS GNV HSVD AVd ® € ® TAVS NV HSVD AV © § 6 JAVS GNV HSVO AV 6 S © PAY CASH AND SAVE 4