The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 18, 1945, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Two Free Deliveries Daily ; 20th Century Meat Market | l NEW NEW NEW MAPLE FOLIAGE 100% Pure Vermont Maple Sugar EDNA CAST Home-Made STUFFED FRESH DATES | | 704 Juneau Deliveries— i0 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Boat Orders Delivered Anytime A ECONOMY Buy bythe Case SAVE 10% | You can save ten per cent on all parchases of canned vegetables and fruits when purchased All well known brands such as § Reliance, Hunt’s and many in case lots. and W, Amocat, others. ALSO . . . Save $1.00 on every iwenty by purchasing our coupon hooks. PICoLY WICELY 16 -- Phones -- 24 2 Deliveries Daily: 10:30 A. M., 2:30 P. M. HI I ——————— CRESTA BLANGA From its origin over 170 years ago, California’s wine industry has grown and matured with the United States. For more than 50 years, Cresta Blanca has carried on this great tradition. Ask for Cresta Blanca by name. CRESTA BLANCA WINE COMPANY, Inc. Los Angeles and Livermors, California For over fifty years, the finest of American wines. |Interior Department | OUTLAW STRIKE TIES UP RESTAURANTS IN (ITY OF FAIRBANKS AIR ROUTES T0 ALASKA | DISCUSSED Interior DeBrMakes Rec-| ommendations fo CAB, Says E. L. Bartlett WASHINbTON, April 18 — The has recom- Protesting ie War Labor Board for a new working agreement, Fairbanks restaurant workers are reported to have re- mained away from their jobs in the Interior city since Monday, accord- ing to word received here last night. Restaurant services have been para- lyzed by the absence from their jobs of an estimated one hundred work- |ers. Information furnished by spokesman for the employers indi- cates that no official strike vote has mended an airline with primary in- |been taken by members of the Culin- terest to and within Alaska should ary Wm'lgers Union and that a be certified for Alaska and main-|large portion of them desired to stay land connections. o s Several lines have applied to the | -4 CAB for authorization to fly the | Alaska Territorial Federation of La- Alaska route, Alaska Delegate E. L.|Por (AF. of L), which renewed its Bartlett said. ;'no ;tr;‘_k‘eeb' pledgl: slt f:ts meem:g It is expected the examiner's re- | et M TURTY; s 19 NREALEDY port, based on extensive hearings, plane for Fairbanks to be on the f hi ; ground of the “outlaw” strike. w1k ibe il wian gy Mol DUt Information as to all the issues 'TE)I employers to join with them in application to the! ¥rank Marshall, President of the| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA KIDNAP CASE TASK FORCES NEARING END Testimony by Horace Ibach Winds Up Defense This Morning Finis was expected to be written this afternoon to the trial in District Court here of Winifred and {Horace- Ibach. The taking of testi- mony in the case was completed this forenoon, with cross-examina- tion by the Government's attor- neys of Mr. Ibach, the final de- ilcnsc witness. Mr. Ibach followed his wife and co-defendant, to kidnaping, assault with a dangerous weapon and de- struction of property charges, to the stand yesterday afternoon. In his, testimony, Mr. Ibach related ithat the complaining witness, Cecil W. Hubbard, had been in posses- NES| the Board’s decision may require another month or six weeks, Bart- lett added. The Interior Department has “as certificates for operation to Alaska should be granted, short of |uneconomic excess and facilities, as |will assure the maximum of eco- recommended to CAB that many nomic competition.” The Department did not indicate preference for any parucular' line. HOSPITAL HOTES Mrs. Sanuago Constantino wa yesterday admitted to St. Hospital for surgical care. Lisle Herbert, medical patient at St. Ann's Hos. |pital, returned to his home yester- day. was born to Mr. and Mrs. Sollette in St. Ann’s Hospital. Albert Howard, of Tenakee, Was | that if no a admitted to the Govenment Hos: pital yesterday for medical care. Patricia Pratt was yesterday dis- | charged from the Government Hos: pital, after receiving medical car - E. C. Tibbetts, of Sitka, has ar- rived in Juneau and is a guest at |t the Gastineau Hotel. SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS Ferry's . . Lilly's ONION SETS et e e it HAINES SEED POTATOES Get Yours Now ® & 0 o 0 ® 0 o o0 25lbs. 50lbs. 1001b T s. s. s. |® Lowest tonight ... 34 |e Highest Thursday 49° HOME STYLE PEACHES HUNT'S 4 largs cans 10:15 A. M. Ann’s | who has been a | Early this morning, a baby girl 12 cans $1.55 $4.59 TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. MINIMUM—$2.60 BlRerts CASH GROCERY |involved has not been received here, |sion of a rifle at the time the de- but it is reported that the workers |fendants are alleged to have for- [seck a new contract with the Res-(cibly detained him. The defense |taurant Operators Association em- offered to introduce the rifle, but |bodying higher wage rtates, while|Judge George F. Alexander denied | the employers have refused to concur | its receipt. to any wages in excess of maximums, Mr. Ibach’s story also averred established by the War Labor Board |that no physical harm had been in a previous decision which has/done the complainant, that Hub- been appealed by the union. bard had fainted when accosted by Dr. Charles F. Battin, Wage Sta- | bilization Director for the War La-| bor Board in Alaska, stated here |that he has not yet been officially ed into the disagreement. How- acting on what information hc: so far received from Fairbanks, | | Dr. Battin wired Ernie Marsh, Re- | glonal Director of the Conciliation | Service of the Department of Labor, nL_San Francisco. As yet he has TC-‘ls the basis for the third charge ceived no reply. against the two defendants, also of Dr. Battin has also wired the'a civil suit brought by Hubbard president of Culinary Workers at against them. put aboard the Ibach boat and taken to Elfin Cove in order that assistance might be secured for him, and that at Elfin Cove he had been transferred to another craft unharmed. Mr. Ibach also denied knowledge of the cause of 'the fire which resulted in destruc- tion of Hubbard's boat, and which Fred | Fajrbanks, advising return to work| Arguments to the jury by counsel | |and continuation of negotiations, were to be heard at the resump- greement can be reached tion of Court this afternoon, with vorkers should stay on their jobs , distinct possibility that the case and have the issues in conflict cer-|might be referred to the jury to- fied to the War Labor Board as a 'day. | dispute” case. He has similarly 2d-| Mempbers of the petit jury panel |vised the employers. 1zn'(', ordered to report in Court | It is emphasized that no action|iomqrrow morning, when it is ex- |toward a hearing will be taken bY|pocteq that selection will be made War Labor Board until after ,r g t1ja] jury to hear the charge have returned to their jobs. |yoainsy Dan White, accused of al- L ‘“egcd embezzlement. ————— e o o o & 0 00 WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) ‘Temperatures for 21-Hour Period Ending 7:30 0’Clock This Morning In Juneau—Maximum, 49; minimum, 36. Precipitation, .28 of an inch. At Airport—Maximum, 50; minimum, 28. Precipitation, .08 of an inch. e o e 00 00 0 0 TOMORROW'S FORECAST Decreasing cloudiness, with light rains tonight and Thursday. Partly cloudy ‘Thursday night. . . Alaska Seed Co. - Pound 2 5¢ eeeeevseevssevccoe ® o 0 0 ¢ 0 0 0 0 0 —— | HELD IN JAIL | Ronald E. Mounce, arrested here ‘late yesterday by Deputy U. S. Marshals, on arraignment before |U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray en- ,tered not guilty pleas to charges of assault and battery. On failure to post bond, set at $250, he was committed to the Federal Jail. ————— Empire wan? ads get quick resuits. SUPREME Case $8.95 2:15 P. M. Mr. Ibach at the time and had been! Se0evece0eaceeteccsioe ' SMASHING AT NIP AIRCRAFT (Continued from Page One) American destroyer was sunk in the Western Pacific. By Lief Erickson (Associated Press War Correspondent) GUAM, April 18—The destruction lof 2,208 Japanese planes since car- 'rier sweeps in the Ryukyus and the |Japanese mainland started March |18, has been reported by Admiral |Chester W. Nimitz. U. S. infantrymen, meantime, {held two-thirds of Te Shima Island, off the west central coast of Ok- 'inawa, with the Yanks of the| | Twenty-Fourth Corps meeting mod- lerate resistance on the 10-square |mile island, which is valuable for | its captured airfield. Only a few Japanese observation planes were over the Okinawa area | | yesterday, while a strong force of Superforts were hammering at slx‘ |key air bases in the Kyushu group, ‘heightening the campaign to neu-| |tralize airfields from which the lenemy has been striking at the U. S. invasion armada. | About 1600 enemy planes out of 2,200 downed or destroyed by |’ |U. S. forces, were credited to fliers | from Admiral Marc Mitscher’s fast | |carrier task force which prepnred! the way for the Okinawa invasion. | | A toll of 600 planes was ac-| | counted for by anti-aircraft gunners, |planes from escort carriers and planes based on Okinawa. British fleet carriers covering the southern flank of the invasion with | strikes against Formosa and the | |southern Ryukyus destroyed 80 Jap; planes in the same period. | On Ie Shima Island, Tenth Army Doughboys were advancing through heavily-mined terrain against the Jap garrison of 1,000 troops com- | |pressed into the eastern sector. | |Artillery has been landed in sup- | |port of the assault ‘troops. e — 23 PASSENGERS ARE CARRIED ON TUESDAY BY ALASKA COASTAL | Alaska Coastal Airlines yesterday |flew the following passengers to Sitka—Benny Lingle, Eugene Mc- {Roberts, G. W. Devore and V. |Carrier. ‘ Juneau to Haines—John Harmon. | Juneau to Skagway — Richard |S. Green and John Kelleher. Juneau to Hoonah—J. W., De-| Champlain, Harry Douglas, Mrs. Harry Douglas and Paud E. Hickok. Juneau to Pelican City—Bill Pege. Returning to Juneau from Sitka were—Henry Rosen, Ann M. Ander- son, Ed Tibbetts, A. L. McCarter, Capt. James Miller and Harold R. Bean. Excursion Inlet to Juneau—Hans | Floe and Sam Pekovich, Pelican to Juneau—Bill Pege. Skagway to Juneau—E. C. Ha- nousek. | Juneau to Skagway—Floyd Miller. | e DIVORCE FILED An action in divorce, charging in- | ‘compatabmty, has been filed here |With the Clerk of the U, S. Dis- | trict Court by Irene Marvin, against Charles A. Marvin. { | Empire wanv ads get quick results. | (TECHN! be used in its storage. The brightest light for Northern nights For a steady, glowing, white light easy to read by, brilliant enough to light up every corner of the room, useStandard Blazo in your gasoline lamps. This highly refined, volatile fluid ideally fits northern climatic conditions. Blazo is a water-white pressure appliance fuel that is both extremely efficient and economical. Because of itsinflammable characteristics, care should STANDARD BLAZO STANDARD OF CALIFORNIA NO ADMISSI - SOUND MOTION PICTURE ARMS AROUND THE WORLD" Will Be Shown at The Salvation Army Hall Willoughby Avenue 7:30P.M. Thursday Night ICOLOR) ON CHARGED Anchorage Fairbanks Nome Baranof Hotel OFFICE Serving Seward Peninsula and Kuskokwim Area | ALASKA AIRLINES Information and Reservations SHOWER STALLS COMPLETE ONLY 4 LEFT While They Last Price $58.50 JUNEAU pLumsing - CHNLA - HeRTING MONTHLY ACCOUNTING SERVICE Dorothy Dolan Phone Red 165 Yakutat Cordova Kodiak PHONE 667 Notice is hereby given to all per- sons of any degree of Tlingit or Haida Indian descent resident in Juneau and Douglas and vicinity that a public meeting of such per- sons will be held at the ANB Hall at Juneau on April 24 at 7:30 p.m. for the purpose of selecting attorneys for prosecution of Indian aboriginal claims of title before the Secretary of the Interior and other branches of the Federal Government and for the further purpose of electing a committee of three of such persons to enter into an attorney’s contract of employment on behalf of all such Indian residents of Juneau and Douglas and vicinity on forms sug- gested by the Office of Indian Affairs. LESTER ROBERTS, Acting Secretary, Juneau Local Camp ANB ‘GEORGE BROTHER Liquor Store Wednesday o Saturday LIOQUOR SPECIALS . Pre-War Whiskey Sth' §3.90 5th 3.95 th 3.95 5th 3.00 Sunnybrook - - - Calvert's Special - - 3 Rivers Reserve - Stuari-Hill Bourbon Rum, 0ld Timothy - - 5th 2.50 Old Thompson - - - 5th 3.95 Rum, Red Horse, res-5.50-5th 3.95 Gin, Kinsey, 94.4prof . 5th 3.95 FREE DELIVERY 10:30 TO 4 P. M. BEER BEER Olympia . . Rainier . . Schlitz . . . Alt Heidelberg . . Pabst Blue Ribbon . . Columbia Ale . . Trommer's EORGE BROTHER Liquor Store Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. . KT ) i AR, |4 - ) ve P Y « ) il siw

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