The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 1, 1945, Page 5

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THURSDAY FEBRUARY llberahon of Mamla Wlll Prove_ Macs I 1945 1 The World THIS ARERIAL VIEW OF MANILA, capital of the Philippine islands, is the goal of American forces under the leadership of Gen. Dnug- las MacArthur in the new invasion of the isiand of Luzaf largest S S T = COL. O. F. OHLSON | ministration On his return to Anchorage, Cok BACK FROM SOUTH n his return to Anchorage | Ghlson was y with ideas for Col, Otto F. Ohlson, General Man- | th'e developr Alaska during ager of the Alaska Railroad, return- | the postwar period He slated thal ed to his headquarters in Anchor-|many plans are underway to enc - age recently after a months trip to age the tourist business that he be- Washington, D. G. On his way lieves will flourish after the wars are back to Alaska, Col. Ohlson stopped won, and stated that practical de- in Seattle for a conference with velopment of both mining and farm- Alaska Steamship officials and ing as Alaska industries must be | members of the War Shipping Ad- fostered. LS L % E b of the Philippines on which the city is located. The large structure n the foreground is the new post office, which is situated on the bank of the Pasig river. (International ) HIGUERA FUNERM. IS HELD THIS MORNING ...\ Ciive.” i eomani. ek !Benito and Joe Rose. - e, —— ¢ l Pallbearers, all soldiers, were as follows The funeral for Frank Higurea, | who died at St. Ann’s Hospital on January 25, was held at 9 o'clock | this morning in the Catholic Baranof Hotel. SMITH ARRIVES Roy O. Smith is a guest at the He registered from Church of the Nativity, the Rev.|Anchorage. Edward Budde officiating. Inter-! - — ment was in Evergreen Cemetery. Hi, Bill! Its' Feb. 7 - The world is an AP man’s oyster. He is at home in all lands and with all peoples. His duty is to mirror faithfully all men and; all events and the acceptance of his word is universal. Truth is an AP man’s pearl—it lights his way to the ends of the earth. | | | [the Territory in coordinating plam} | for postwar work. | The Juneau Chamber in D(‘c(‘m-: {ber sent wqueries to Chambers| | throughout the Territory, askinu{ opinions on a plan to establish/ |such an agency. The plan for a board of four members to serve | without pay, who would in \um‘ |appoint a paid administrator. | Legislature would be asked to ap- {agency through the next two years.| neau proposal, | Territorial Chamber of Commercel POST-WAR AGENCY DISCUSSION IS HELD AT CHAMBER MEET Members of Senate Guests at Juneau Meeting Noon Today Members of the Territorial Sen- ate were guests at today's meeting of the Juneau Chamber of Com- merce as a discussion was held on a proposed Territorial development Agency to promote the welfare of The propriate $50,000 to carry the Replies from | were: Nome—In favor of postwar plan- | ning, but hadn't received copy of | Juneau Chamber’s full plan. Seward—In favor of Legislature providing for such an emergrnl,y‘ Want Charles Carter of Juneau on the board. Cordova—Favors and endorses Ju- also Charles Carter. Fairbanks—Would revive the Al- aska Planning Council instead. | Haines--Favors the plan. Petersburg—Would rather have the matter handled through the, various Chambers with legislative funds for support, | rather than formation of another agency. Would have a five-member | advisory board appointed by the Governor. Ketchikan—Endorses the plan of | the Juneau Chamber. Members of the Senate were in- | troduced by Charles Carter, and President of the Senate, Edward D, Coffey responded. Dr. Judy Frank and Jessie Mc- {Crary were introduced as .new {members of the chamber. Guests included, in addition to; the solons, Wilbur Wester, former | Secretary of the Juneau Chamber, |now an Anchorage | resident; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thorne of the Bureau of Mines; Garry McDonald, | new salesman locating in- Juneau; | D. W. Gehrke of Pan American Airways, and L. A. Welch of Vaughn, Washington, father-in- law of Mr. Gehrke. Old members Archie Shiels of Pacific American Fisheries, and Harry Godson, CPR agent, were welcomed back. e DELEGATE BARTLETT TELLS OF VISITORS, | | OTHERS IN CAPITAL | Game Played [asi Night at *|both | During this quarter, Doogan of Lhc} ' 'kets, scoring one. Doogan's last attempt Patriotic Conference, which is com- posed of thifty women's orm\nmh‘ tions. Mr. Bartlett had the pleasure of being a guest at the banquet, George Hays. ‘The Territory h: been without the services of such a specialist for several years. | e —,———— | YOUNG CRIMSON BEARS DEFEAT | CATHOLIC TEAM 730 o'Clock at St. Ann’s School | Last night in b\. Ann’s School gymnasium the Juneau Grade School basketball team defeated the | catholic School hoopsters, 22 to 4. A large audience of rooters from both schools were in attendance at the game. In the first few minutes of play, Gus Adams, guard, Juneau Grade School, started the drive to victory by scoring a field goal. Then, Monagle, outstanding player of the Catholic five, scored a foul shot. At the end of the first quarter the Grade school five. | Second Quarter Prouty and Graves led the team, each scoring a basket. Prouty in a| smashing, brilliant play that led to this basket, showed future ability | as a Crimson Bear player. At the end of the half, the score stood 12 to 3, in favor of Juneau. At the start of the third quarter,| teams made substitutions. Croken then scored two field goals.| Catholic. five, scored two points. ourth Quarter At the start of the fourth quar-| ter, Croken scored two more bas- | Doogan of the Catholics, | |came too late to aid his team,| iFnal score, 22 to 4, favor of Juneau | Grade School. Box scores follow: Juneau Grade School WASHINGTON, D. C.—(From Delegate E. L. Bartlett's Offlcei—w Second Lieutenant Carl Moyer, for-| | ! merly a resident of Anchorage, was/ lin the office this week and told of | his great desire to return to Alaska. He arrived in the United State: after serving oveseas with the Para-| troops. Mr. Moyer will receive a medical discharge from the Army in | April and hopes to return to An- chorage soon after that with Mrs. Moyer. Roy B. Earling, Vice President and ! General Manager of the Fairbanks Operations of United Smelting Re- fining and Mining Company, spent [two days last week in ‘Washington | on company business and visited the office, Don Goodman, Operations Man-| | ager for Alaska Airlines, Inc., paid| us @ visit this yeek. He plans on staying in the'city for over a month and is now preparing for the | hearing which will be held by the Civil Aeronautics Board in Febru- ary relative to the matter of appli- cations filed by various airplane companies for routes between the| States and Alaska. | .Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Code of Nome, | who are visiting relatives in this neighborhood for several weeks, were guests of Mr. Bartlett on a tour of| the Capitol. Mr. Code owns Lhez theater at Nome, | Don C. Foster, General Superin- tendent, Office of Indian Affairs, w1 headquarters at Juneau, call- ed on Mr. Bartlett and told us that this was his first trip to Washing- ton since he had undertaken his position. He spent several days in Chicago before coming to Washing- ton and will stop there on his way back to the Territory. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Edmonds of | Anchorage were visitors in Washing- | ton this past week and callel. the office while here. Mr. Edmonds is Superintendent of the Southwest- ern Division of the Alaska Road Commission. This is the first trip that Mr. and Mrs. Edmonds have made together in twenty years. Mrs. Walter B. King, wife of the Ketchikan attorney, and National Executive Committeewoman for the American Legion Auxiliary, Depart- ment of Alaska, came to Washing- ton after attending the exccunve“ committee meeing at the Auxiliary National Headquarters in Indiana-; polis. She was in Washington as a| delegate to the National Women's | Player— F.G. F.T. T.P. ! Prouty 0 ) g Harris 0 0 0 Clevano 0 0 0 |Rush 0 [ 0 Magorty il [ 2 1Graves .. 2 5 7 Croken ... 8 0 8 |Gus Adams . g 4o { Sperling 2 10913 Pegues ... D 7ot Sunderland -0 0.0 Trip 0 o 0 Carter eeser) 0 [ Totals : .16 6 22 St. Ann’s School Player— F.G. F.T. T.P. |Haffner ... -0 0 0 Shaw .0 0 0 Doogan ... 9 3 3 . Wade . 0 0 0 Norris 0 0 0 Russell . 0 [ o Stevens 0 0 0 | Monagle 0 1 1 f Totals 0 4 4 ———— | “EQUAL RIGHTS” BILL | PASSED BY HOUSE | By a vote of 19 to 5, the House| this’ afternoon, under suspension of rules, passed the “equal rights” {measure. —— - | DYED-IN-WOOL YARN A MARSHALL ISLAND NA- VAL BASE—Three sailors, boast- | ing about their suntans, were join- | ed by a fourth who boasted: “Yes-| terday when T walked past the dock in shorts, some fresh guy off a ship from Pearl Harbor, asked me how much I'd charge to weave him the score was 4 to 1 in favor of|~ 1 P ST B S cocoanut mat.” STOCK ouoimous the LST about 64 IN PHILIPPINES PAGE FIVE 3 CRAFT LOST -f 1 which was held at the Hotel Stat-| NEW \'0'{“;1" s Ao fer and sttended by 1300 persons,|quotation of Alaska Juneat mine| oo F Rl ¢t Mrs. King has left on her return Stock today is AETichT bRt ,,(“[/\\\},”,I:;:,:“j{:;,i’.,: lm".l‘h;‘olvo:s trip hotne |91, Beech Aircraft 12's, Bethlehem J AWERPELSs Y p . Steel 1%, Curtiss-Wright 5%, In. and Palmer, and the landing shipy Dr. Rudolph Haas of the U, , ternational Harvester 773, Kenne- T30 b W6POTiel bY fhe Nawy oo o Public Health Service, called at the ¢Ott 37%, North American Aviation i“f“”‘} “‘l'h”‘l‘“];‘l;l ‘“””:; in ‘:‘-’:“’“"gj; » - ke e » 99 >, e P nes. No extel 0l office immediately prior to his de- 9%. New York Central 2%, Nor-| . o1iec is given, but the Navy{ parture for Afaska, Dr. Haas, tuber- | thern Pacific 18%, U. 8. Steel 60%, | 1" " ox & culosis specialist, is being sent to p°l‘;‘““ 5;““ AR [;‘l‘l(.,d T no-‘ Alaska at the urgent request of Gov.| DoW. Jones averages today are as| "y | e cweepers a notthall B om0 o Carter and Dr.|follows: Industrials, 153.79; rails, The mine sweepers had a normal ¥ g, A 745 \m““h 2735 complement of about 120 men and GRCUP HEALTH ASSN., Inc. i\\.(, Annual meeting to be held { TOMORROW EVENING : February 2nd, 1945 at8:00 P. M. in American Legion Dugout PAY All Members and Inierested Persons Urgently Requested fo Atiend! Nmm-».---”-,,---,--,-..-mm-m-.-m f J“NEAII WELDING AND MACHINE SHOP KELVIE'S ANIMAL HOSPITAL NOW OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY BOARDING KENNELS OFFICE: 914 CALHOUN AVENUE PHONE: RED 115 AMBULANCE SERVICE Dr. W. A. KELVIE, Veterinary 631 Willoughby Avenue AUTHORIZED AGENTS FOR Phone 525 GRAY MARINE DIESELS and GENERAL MOTORS l)lESbLb From 25 to 400 H. GRAY MARH\L (‘AS Er\(nlN S to MARlNE SUl’l’LlES I Friday and Saturday SPECIAL. EGGS SUGAR THOMPSON SEEDLESS RAISINS RICE SPARKIES - 2 for JUST ARRIVED PRICES -2 dozen $1.35 10 Ibs. 4 Ibs. 75¢ 75¢ 35¢ SHIPMENT Fresh Fruils and Vegetables TRY OUR PORK LOIN ROASTS af - Pound 48¢ FEUSI & JENSEN Phone 202 | "II||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIII|||IIlllllIIIIIHIIIIIII|IIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Doug ——— gy S ——— our ceoperation. The Alaska Transportation Company personnel are taking in the winning of the war . forces will continue to have first call on our faci Dedicated to Victory is proud of the part its fleet and its the needs of the armed 2 ties and 100 per cent of We are not unmindful of the friendships built through the years of serving Alaska . . . are bending every effort toward maintaining a dependable service for these old friends . . . and looking toward the days of peace when i an augmented fleet and a highly trained organization will render service to the Alaska of tomorrow in a bigger and better way. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION CO. D. B. FEMMER, Agent, JUNEAU SEATTLE 1, WASH,, Pier 7, MAin 7477 TACOMA, WASH,, Perkins Bldg., MAin 0840

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