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PAGE SIX Super Market @rders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. ¥ Phone, Write or Wire Your Order EGGS Grade A Large SPECIAL C Buy $20.00 Coupon Book for $19.00 SAVE 59, Candy Bars 26 Varieties 24 Bars to Carton Phone, Write or Wire George Brothers FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY We reserve right to limit quantities. George Brothers Save You Money! 0.P. A. Price 66¢ | Code; Martin Found Not Guilty of Any Violation (Continued ]rom Page One) finished, they testified In an attempt to show that the Light Company did not install meters on jobs they had not con- tracted for without permits, Antrim Johnstone if it were not! that he, at one time, refused| connect & meter until had the job inspected replied “Yes.” Antrim Questioned { Antrim took the stand and said Martin had violated the law when the current was turned on by Smith, as he was the supervisor in charge. He charged Martin knew a permit was required before and after installation, but he ahead without such mit Antrim said it was the tractor’s responsibility, while Faulk- ner contended that, under the law, it was the owner or the lessee’s. Antrim said that on last Thurs- day, the day before the last Coun- cil meeting, when he knew he was| going to be fired, he called on Martin and asked him to clear the Maurstad job and any others he might have, by obtaining building permits, was asked true to cwner | He anyway, per- Arrest Decided When he failed to do by p. m. Friday, he decided to have Martin arrested, and did not make threats or promises. Faulkner then closely questioned 50 any was fired He to bring action asked whether of kind the the Council have with his action? Antrim denied he anything to do had any ul- sell, terior motives for bringing the ms(-‘ e |Jimmie Wright, into system court, saying he wanted of law enforcement that was equal to all, pointing out that the Light Company was the only contractor who had violated ordinance, Then followed more arguments a: who is legally responsible for taking out the permit Antrim then charged that the evidence was enough to bring in a verdict and the production of a permit was the only thing that would actually ‘clear the defendant Plea For Unity Faulkner then went over his evi- dence again, stating that to the jury conclusive the | | Juneau Has No Building [ARGE LIST IS - 1 | ( CON-will F. Gath, Willlam W. Bying- !PT boats, subs and sea-borne land- | [Hagarty. | Cortez, went | |Sunderland, Carl | Hallick, S. Larsen, | George |nelly, | Tippets, !Antrim as to his motives in \v‘nl-:L W ing until a few minutes before he|warq Maki, this| g fact | that Martin had an employee on|nrygeth, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-— UNEAU, ALASKA RELEASED TODAY 26 VESSELS BY DRAFT BOARD SENTDOWN l-A\——John H. D‘\). Glendon W.‘ Wald, William L. Fitzpatrick, Jay | |B. Mallott, Jacob Korfus, Roy E: Butcher, Willlam P. Zirglis, Wil- |of its known carrler, battleship and liam L. Jack, Francis J. Hennessy,!cruiser power necessary to engage Ned Albright, Fred C. Morgan|ihe United States Fleet in another Karl Alstead, Thomas D. Williams.!major action or seriously check its 1-C—Ernest E. Peterson. further incursions into the Western 2-B—David A. Mahlum, Pacific. A. Johnson 2-C—Winifield E. Day. A—Lynes H. Seevers, The !nllu\\lm new ~ reclassifica- tion list was lclr'a\ed today by the | (Continued from Fugc One) | Leonard Great Engagement During the three-day battle, the Burt A.lfate of MacArthur's invasion hung |in the balance of this touchstone | 4-A—Carl S. DeLong, George G.'which brought the Jap fleet out| Thomas N. Cashen, Lloyd'of hiding and precipitated one of | John Perrin, Rex G. the greatest engagements in naval | R. Krause, Ar- history, involving almost every type thur L. Pinkerton, Alvin P. Dotson, {m war vessel from battleships to Green Kazee, Edwin J B. Hanford, Harr Walter P. Sharpe, ! Fred R. Geeslin, Leslie D. Cashen |Henry R. Johnson, Reyburn J |Smith, John D. Kennedy, Dalmacio ton, Harry H Blake, James V. Williams, sed planes. The greatest previous I\lppun(‘su' defeat since Pearl Harbor was| |when 11 Jap ships were sunk and‘ nine possibly sunk or damaged in the battle of Midway, June, 1942 |Christine Adelman, |Louise Horta and Martha Walls THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1944 — Have You Tried JOLLY JOAL Wheat and Soy PANCAKES and WAFFLES? A DELICIOUS AND NUTRITIOUS BREAKFAST Ready Mixed Farewell Party Held By Sons of Norway The Sons of Norway held a regular business meeting last night in the IOOF Hall, followed by a going-away party in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Rian and Mr. |and Mrs. John Sunderland. The guests of honor plan to leave Ju- neau soon to go south for the winter. | The Sons of Norway also an- nounce a series of card parties for Saturday nights, the first having been given last week and the second scheduled for Saturday night of this week. - e e 'Rebekahs Initiate; Roll Call Is Held \ Initiation and annual roll call was held last night by the Re- bekah Lodge at a meeting in the IOOF Hall, Candidates wer Gudrian lson, Juneau Deliveries—10 A. M. and 2 P. M Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Boat Orders Delivered Anytime! Selma Peterson, igrid Peterson, Betty Bennett, M. Sarabia, Donald Hanebury Sampson S. Harry, George J Harju, Stanislav J. Rekosh, Eladio A. BeLarde, Stanley K. Harris,| Osmund A. Staple, Andrew K.| MacLean, Arthur Adams, Arvid T. Michael Washko, Holger Oscar J. Lundstrom E. Parmenter. O. C. Con- Roy C. Cutier, Melburn E Edwin W. Larson, Wilbur Herbert W. Wolf, Ed- Carl V. Anderson, Guy Prince, Theodore Austerman, Frederick H. Folette, Henry C. William Nelson. Laverite K. Nielson, John G Five of these were transports. American Losses | Known American losses in lh(‘ running battles around the Philip- | pines are two small carriers and | a number of PT boats sunk, plus\ an unannounced number damaged. | The Nimitz report today was| limited to the two engagements; | |the overwhelmingly one-sided vic tory over the largest Jap task force trapped south of Formosa by U. S., carrier planes, warships and subs, and the crucial’ sea and air en- gagement fought northwest of | Leyte, off Samar Island, in the Sibuyan Sea. MacArthur previously | ester, a| the | Olson, [nolds, otto A. w {E. Barragar, |Emil R. Zingeler, Leonard J. Holm- | quist, { Peterson, had not proved anything yet. Then| he made a moving plea for unity among the citizens of rapping the mass meeting sponsors and reminding the people of the| hard times both John Malony Ed Webster had had in keeping the| infant light and telephone com- panies going, and saying the elec- tric rates had not been raised in 20 years. asked the people to| consider, instead of the public| utilities question, why the Alaska- Juneau was forced to close down. The case went to the jury 5:10 p. m, and the “not guilty” Juneau, | |don K. Junge, md\KLa ton, Rod Hulse, John L. Dono- verdict was returned in less than| 10 minutes. City Magistrate M. E. Monagle |presided at the trial, and the jurors were Walter B. Hiesel, Walter P. Sharpe, Mrs. John Lowell, Maynard, Mrs. |A. Van Mavern, |Mrs. Mae Kilroy, Miss Eliza Crowe, Miss Jane Alexander. B 6l Joes Are Given low Down About Farming; It Is Work and Plenty OIAII (Continued from Page One) Mrs. Russell Ray Peterson, Mrs. and that it may take from $400 to $2,000 to buy seed and feed berort-:I any profits began to roll in. That alone may knock a lot of |Joe’s dreams. However, it's also pointed out that all this money doesn’t need to be | Farmer Joe is told where he can go | to get the balance he needs. | in the bank.| {D. Thom: |A. Chase. Iliodor Merculieff, | A. J. Streed, | Mrs. Alec Russell, | Police Court this morning | | | Maurice Antrim |dict, Sig Swanson, of incandescent metallic vapor. | e reported on a third action in the southern entrance to Leyte Gulf. | Pursuing Enemy | U. S. carrier planes are reported | still pursuing the crippled Samar |task force as it tried to escape | through the Sibuyan Sea. The| naval engagements have apparently | broken off, but undoubtedly Ameri- ‘can planes are out to hunt dow')‘ whatever remnants remain of the other two Jap flotillas. ! Jap naval communiques admitted the loss of one battleship, two cruisers, one destroyer, and sub-| stantial damage to another battle- | ship. Most of the destruction was in- flicted on the Jap task force caught south of Formosa, Nimitz said, with “no damage to our | ships.” | Previously Nimitz reported the loss of the light cruiser Princeton. | Escort Carrier Sunk MacArthur announced the sink- ing of an escort carrier from the venth Fleet, covering his am-| phibious landings on Leyte. The imperial task force, near Formosa in the Sea, was “attacked by a concen- tration of aircraft, surface ships| and submarines” for a day and a J‘nxghl. Enemy aircraft flew out jof the Philippines in a futile at- tempt to rescue the trapped Jap! forces. The Japs finally escaped under cover of the black night. - TO HUNT DEER |Osborn, John Tetoff, Joseph Tas- Fritz S. Johnson, Peter Harry Dosofey Merculieff, George G. Anderson, Albert Jack, Louis V. Puzey, Richard F. Shu- man, Robert B. Lesher, Sven S Eli J. Post, Percy E. Rey-| J. Larsen, Erwin D. Mercer, Robert S. Christenson, Guy C. Parsons, Albert S. Burell, Mert Harrison, Hollis E. Evans, James Nicolai G. Merculief, Andrew Holes, Sigurd Fause, Abel- ard A. Ardenia, John W. Maloney, Jewel B. Wheat, Leslie E. Teagle Willis E. Norwell, Alton H. Howe, Hendrickson, Robert Jamestown, | F. McDonell, Theodore G Schmaitz, James A. Whiting, Oscar A. Pearson, Richard P. Reese, Syl- var J. Gremier, Tom J p, Gor-| Charles Bloxham, Kenneth S. Williams, Theodore A, Wallace E.| John T.| hue, Anton Pugel, Edwardo E. Ali-| gaya, John E. Peterson, Carl Lehto, | |Ralph Jameson, Merton F. Bene- LeLand Dunlap, | |Herbert C. Callow, Elmer Fern‘i {William H. Fife Honorably discharged—Daniel C. Langden, David H. Conkey, Verlin C. Smith, Gurald A. Liebert, Vern caught Philippine 4-F—John Bland, L. Gaffney, Robert B. Forrest 5, Elmer E. Day, Earl G. James Marvin George Thompson, Mercado, Arthur John J. Adams. ARG A POLICE COURT FINES | 7. | Off to chase the elusive deer atl lMud Bay, C. W. Cady, Hemn Sully, Jack Popejoy Lockhart left on G. G. Brown's | boat, the Vencedor, for a week’s | hunting e LONDON, Oct. 26—Archbishop of | Canterbury, the Most Rev. William Temple, 63, has died of a heart attack. Primate of all England, he The surface of the sun that is|has’ been inthroned visible on earth consists of clouds!rocked The following were fined in City Mable Fay Griffis, $25 on a charge of being drunk and disorderly and Dolly Georgn arrested on the same charge, | was given a 10-day suspended sen- tence on good behavior — e since April 23, 1943. COOKIES Fresh Tasty {of another grandson, | officer Mrs. Norma Callow committee furnished freshments ~ following | work. and her delicious re- the lodge B 'H. M. Porters Are " Again Grandparenis Grzmdparr'nt:\ for a second time, Mr, and Mrs. H. M. Porter of Ju-| neau have received word of the birth “Robert Her- man Nelson,” who arrived at Ta- coma, Washington, October 23. Tipping the scales at nine pounds, the young man joins an older broth- er, Larr ed three. The father is employed at the Todd Ship; s and both he and Mrs. Nelson, the former Anita Por- ter, are well known here. CO: “What's the difference between a sour- dough and a chechaco?” “No difference, when it comes to liking a Co-op chicken dinner.” * * BN G GERALD McLAUGHLIN | PROMOTED T0 MAJOR Gerald McLa neau Public OP: | * Ju- now the pro- | has ghlin, former School instructor, stafioned at Anchorage with U. 8. Army, received a double motion in the same month, it been learned here. On September 19, McLaughlin re- ceived his Majority as an infantry and this promotion was preceded on September 4 by his | “Fatherit; which he received with {the arrival of a young son. D For tops in tender chicken, ask your decler for Washington Co-op poultry — dressed, graded and packed to reach you in prime con= dition, and Clyde | . | in the bomb- | old Canterbury Cathedral All types of farms are described, | |and a brief sentence explains the | {amount of work and confinement ! to duty necessary to maintain them, | George Bros. Special i 49| SATURDAY ONLY We reserve right to limit quantities. Borden’s-—flamaiion-—!]arigold_ M I l K CASH AND CARRY 54.]9 V\AIH THE F JLAR MINI We Reserve the GROCERY ORDER OF Right to Limit! GEORGE BROI‘HERS PHONES 92-95—2 DELIVERIES IR ST T xclusive any with some indication of the returns | that may be expected. | e HOSPITAL NOTES | Mrs. Elizabeth Heydek, who has | been a surgical patient at St. Ann’s | Hospital, was discharged yesterday. Mr Arthur Kunich was dis- charged from St. Ann's Hospital Wednesday after receiving medical care Baby Walten Brommels was ad- mitted to St. Ann’s Hospital yes- terday for medical attention. Louis Wagner was admitted to St Anna yesterday for surgery. A son, weighing five pounds and twelve ounces, was born at 9:10/ o'clock last evening to Mrs. Florence | Paddock in St. Ann’s Hospital. Helen Jackson was discharged | :!ram the Government Hospital yes- terday. Margaret Brown, who has been in the Government Hospital, was dis- { charged yeswrdny .- — Papal territory included more than 3,000,000 people before the uni- tication of Italy in 1870 FIG BARS - 2 pounds 69( e b e e FANCY ASSORTED, Ib. 49 | Many Varieties S EE THEM DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M, 2:15 P. M. MINIMUM—$2.50 S C | BB e/ CASH GRO No matier how many jars of Hills Bros. Coffee you buy, you can depend on every single one to have the same matchless flavor and uni- form quality. And good reason, too! The blend of Hills Bros. Coffee is composed of the finest coffees obtainable. What’s more, Hills Bros. Coffee alore is roasted by the exclusive process, *Controlled Roasting — a method which roasts the blend — evenly — continuously — just a few pounds at a time. Witk every cup youll say, “Now that’s what I call good coffee!” *Trade-marks Reg. U.S. Pat. O,