The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 15, 1945, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT IBACHS PUT ON PROBATION FOR 5 YEARS; FINED Couple Ordered to Leave Dundas Bay Region- ',\'Arlun of the episode which result- |ed in conviction of the Ibachs, they [have paid $2350 as reimbursement for destruction of his 30-foot troll- ing boat. A civil action brought | yagainst them by Hubbard for restor- | ation for the boat is to be dismissed. | Kelso B. Hartness, who had con- |fessed to six counts of forgery, was lalso sentenced this afternoon by Judge Alexander. The last of thnsel to be sentenced at the current Court term, Hartness was ordered to serwf the minimum term of two years in HartnessPatroled . |piommram term of two years in Horace and Winifred Ibach, both convicted of three criminal offen- \ ses by the jury in the most discus.s-‘i ed trial during the present term of the U. S. District Court here, were this afternoon each fined $500 and the sentences are to run concun’cnh‘) ly and were suspended with Harl-‘ ness parolled to the Marshal, on| condition that he make complete| restitution, obtain steady employ-| ment and be on good conduct. Hartness had already offered res- | placed on five-year probation by titution for three forged checks in-| Judge George F. Alexander. {volved in his case and sentence was | The specific sentences imposed by deferred until today in order that he | the Court on the Dundas Bay couple might make the restoration. He is: were: On conviction of kidnapping, expected to return to Tacoma,! three years imprisonment, each; for| Washington, where is was employ- | willful destruction of boat, three ed at a shipyard when he surren-]‘ years imprisonment, each; for as-|dered to come to trial here. sault with a dangerous weapon, $500 | —_————— fine, each. All penitentiary sen- tences were ordered to run consur- rently and were suspended by the Court Parole conditions for the pair were: Complete restitution for the boat they were convicted of burn- ing; that they leave the vicinity where they are now living (Dundas Bay and Elfin Cove) ; that they re- port once each month to the United States Marshal; that they otherwise | conduct themselves as good citizens. | STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, May 15 — Closing quotation of Alaska-Juneau Mine |stock today is 7%, American Can 96%, Anaconda 34%, Curtiss-Wright | |6, International Harvester 87%, Kennecott 37%, New York Central | 251, Northern Pacific 21%, U. S. Steel 66, Pound $4.04. Sales today were 1,010,000. Dow, Jones averages today are as | Pacific war chieftains walk across the newly won airstrip on Okinawa. Left to right they are: Five-star Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Admiral Raymond Spruance and General Simon Bolivar Buckner. (In- ternational) | | the inch steel, Seven PROPOSES BIG THREE MEETING BE HELD CHINA Grand Strategy for Defeat ing Japan Should Be Taken Up, Far East | Eastern problems and perhaps or- | ganize a combined Allied Chiefs of | Staff body for the war against Japan. The unconditional surrenger of Germany and the massing of the full | Allied strength against Japan have | engendered new military, political and economic problems in the Far| East, the newspaper said, adding that the grand strategy for defeat-| Japan should be discussed thoroughly from standpoints of co- ordination of manpower and op-| | erations. | The question whether the Allies| 5 & [ TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1943 meanwhile, twin Chinese columns were reported closing in on Paochs. ing, the base from which the Japs' anese last month launched an, uns successful drive toward the Chih~ kiang Air Base. By Sunday ong Chinese column was 15'% miles northwest of Poaching, while thé other, driving down the main highs way, was 19 miles west of the city. TR Sy TAYLOR TO INTERIOR Ike Taylor, Chief Engineer for the Alaska Road Commission, flew to Fairbanks yesterday to coms mence his season’s activities in ths ™ CHUNGKING, May 15—The Chi- | $hould invade Japan or the Chinese | ypiorior 1t 5 expected that he will nese Herald, which often reflects the views of the Chinese Foreign Office, advocated today a meeting some- where in Asia of President Truman, | mainland first also should be decid-| ed, the newspaper said. On China’s eastern seaboard, the Chinese troops are now fighting in the streets of Foochow, after enter- return to the ARC headquarters here about July 1. u . 1 Sl il & Jack Popejoy, recently appointed Prime Minister Churchill and Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek. ‘The newspaper said such a meet- ing could deal with outstanding Far | ing the old treaty port opposite For- City Clerk, has terminated his cons mosa on Friday. nection with the USED and is now, In the Hunan counter-offensive, ' at work full-time at the City Hall. il SAVE... the Whing Ding Way Before sentence was decreed by| the Court for the Ibachs, it was| pointed out by their attorney, How- | ard D. Stabler, that restitution for' the boat had been made by them and that the trial jury had return- | ed a recommendation for “leniency”| along with its guilty verdict. | In a brief interview immediately follows: Industrials, 164; rails, 55.85; | utilities, 30.75. (anadian; - Brigad | ALASKA AIRLINES' FIRST STEWARDESS ONDUTY INNORTH ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Renee MUNICH HOME OF HITLER ELABORATE Safe OpenJ But No Will, Just Autographed Cop- | war began. plates, embedded in four-feet thick concrete made up the ceiling. Every| reom w separated from the next by steel doors. There was a modern little electric kitchen, a small but, comfortable bedrgom and several small underground living rooms. The more one studies Hitler's var-: ious hideouts, the more one realizes after he and his wife had heard the | Brust is pretty and petite. She is | how deceitfully official propaganda sentence, Mr. Ibach declared they; WITH THE CANADIAN FIRST, could not yet say what are their|ARMY, May 15.—The Canadians will | future plans or where they will now send a brigade containing 350 offi- | Tesidé, as “the whole thing was very |cers and 4,997 enlisted men to par- unéxpected.” They are the owners ticipate in the joint Allied occupa- of considerable property at Dundas|tion of Berlin. The brigade is ex- Bay, including an abandoned can-|Pected to be in Berlin about 2 month, nery which they have been dis-| ———aee mantling for salvage. Mr. Ibach's| regular occupation is that of fisher.| Hans Floe, canneryman of Hawk | man. Inlet, is a guest at the Baranof| By agreement with Cecil Hu})bnrd. Hotel. HANS FLOE HERE Drop This Bomb on Hirohito's Palace plooly myceLy | 16 -- Phones -- 24 RRRFFRG OO In the fishing business * TIME is an important factor . . . . We deliver your groceries WHEN you want them and WHERE you want them! We Guarantee the Quality of every item sold. @ PHONE 704 O O O AR A O T N AR R AR R R AR AR R AR R R R R R AR R R R R R R R R R R R R AR R R RS, Juneau Deliveries— 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A, M. ooz ez 222 222 n2 o 2 s 2o e a2 22 g0 2 20 2 2o 2 2 WJ |start to do her stuff. |Mexico and Canada as well. es of "Mein Kampf’ By Louis P. Lochner the first of the Alaska Airlines’| new stewardesses to arrive on the! job. Ever since she came to An- chorage, Miss Brust has been im- b patiently awaiting the arrival of the. MUNICH, May 14»7Ahere' were first Douglas plane, so that she can disappointed faces in the U. S. 179th Besides her Infantry when one of its mechanics good looks, Renee likes to fly better cpened Hitler's safe in his private than anything she can think of, so home on Aussere Prinz Regenten she ought to make an excellent stew- ' Strasse. ardess, She almost had a private Instead of the expected dl)(‘\l'- license of her own back in Califor- | ments—possibly even the Fuehrer's nia, just before everyone was will—the found only 12 copies of grounded after Pearl Harbor. ‘lho first edition of “Mein Kampf”,| Born in Detroit 23 years ago, Re-|most of them autographed. Ol,hcr-‘ nee has lived in every part of the wise there was not a scrap of paper United States, and has travelled in In the safe. | Just! But under the 'residence“fi'us; before the war she married the first|found one of the most modern and| pilot of a B-26. In September, 1943, bombproof cellars in all Germany.| he left Barksdale Field in Shreve-|The shelter, according to tha gare- |taker, was constructed only @fter port, La., for overseas duty; and in| | built him up as a simple man of the people, whose personal wants were the most modest and whose every hour was so concentrated up- on Germany's welfare that he had no time for private life. | Unknown to most residents of Munich, he had maintained his sumptuous private residence here since 1929 while pretending to live| either at the Reichs Chancellery in| Berlin, the mountain retreat on! Obersalzberg, above Berchtesgaden, or in the pretentious so-called Fuehrerbau on Munich's Koenigs- | platz. i FATHER, SON HERE | M. A. Chase and Charles Chase,' of Gustavus, are guests at the; Hotel Juneat [ - Jenuary, 1944, he and his crew were shot down in action over Italy. For a while after this, Renee worked in a bank at Long Beach,| California. But soon she got itchy feet to see more of the world, and| started out for Alaska. In Juneau,| Renee was secretary to Captain Carr| at the Sub-Port of Embarkation. But | all the time she was determined to| become an airline stewardess. So; when she heard that Ted Law of| Alaska Airlines was on the lookout| for them, she hopped a plane for| Anchorage, and got the job. Besides | flying, Renee likes sports, and wants to get a sun tan. Alaska Airlines is planning to have three stewardesges on the Juneau-| Anchorage-Nome route. Katherine Anderson, who has been with Del- ta Airlines, will be chief stewardess, and is'expected on the first Douglas. ‘The third will be Mrs. Maxine Bran- ham of Anchorage, wife of Lt. Bud | Branham, Naval pilot. Mrs. Bran-| ham, and Miss Brust will go through a course of stewardess training un- der Miss Anderson before starting to work. All three girls will have blue uniforms, of a similar color to those worn by the Alaska Airline pllots. SEVENTH WAR LOAN. GETS OFF T0 GOOD START, IS REPORT Treasury Says Nation Is' Backing Loan Drive Wholeheartedly WASHINGTON, May 15.—The Treasury = Department = has some heartening “information which is | that the Seventh War Loan is off to a good start towards its goal off $14,000,000,000. This 'is only the second day of the Bond Drive, and no sales figures will/! be available until tonight. Open- | ing day reports from all over the! country have indicated that the nl!<" tion is backing the bond-selling campaign with enthusiasm. ‘ Treasury officials have invited the | public to buy a bond for some one overseas and send him a duplicate | by V-mail. Bond-buyers can get| special V-mail certificates for this purpose wherever bonds are issued. | The certificate bears this caption:' “Another Bond Between Us—From the Folks Back Home.” —— e — SHINERS SCOTTSBLUFF, Neb. Shoes were neat and shiny in Scottsbluff High School today. From Superin- | tendent J. E. Shedd on down, the | faculty shines the shoes of all| students who bought a war bond. Sales were brisk, totaling $5,692 the first day Harbor Island 301bs. A P GEORGE BROTHERS Super Market Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Phones 92-35—2 Free Deliveries Daily Phone—Write or Wire George Brothers Plant Your Garden NOW 31bs.25¢ Early Rose Seed Potatoes 3 Ibs. 25¢ 301bs. $3.95 3 Ibs. $1.00 “NULIFE" FERTILIZERS 3Ibs. $ .55 101hs. $ .95 30 Ibs. 82.75 100 1bs. $4.95 We.carry a full line of SEED for that Graden! EORGE BROTHER Super, Market Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Aecepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Seed Potatoes $3.95 SETS BROOMS - - - - - EACHS$1.23 PAPER TOWELS - - 2for35¢ - FLUFFO, Vegetable Shorfening 3 ~ @9¢ TENDERONI, Van Camp’s- 3 pkgs. 29 S hee..1.09 BUTTER:. 99° CloverValley MEATS MEATS PURE PORK LINKS - - Ib.53c Center Cut Pork CHOPS, b. 49¢ LOIN PORK ROAST - - Ib.43¢ LOIN LAMB CHOPS - - Ib.59¢ SHOULDER LAMB - - - Ib.43« LEGS OF LAMB - - - - 1b49c LIQUOR DEPARTMENT SCHENLEY'S RESERVE, Prewar 5th $4.35 COLUMBIA ALE - - - 11ounces 2 hottles 35¢ 6 bottles $1.00 These prices available through Saturday, May 19 IRVING'S MARRE 2 DELIVERIES DAILY-10:30 A.M., 2:30 P.M, Phone 519 Phone 519

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