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PAGL EIGHT THE DAILY ALASKA LMPIRL [UNLAU /\LASKA I"RIDAY MAY IS I94 kept in the war would receive a 50 introduced by R(‘]no\m tative S PROPOSED FORMEN ;oo Miesars RATE IS LOWEST Tt my recently announced a gible for discharge but said some who could not be spared would be \\':\.\HT\ retained even Ihhu h they had thel oqtibel 46 Biis |Beaver FaIIs Power Issue ing men Bid in at 1%2% by | Seattle Concern , KETCHIKAN, Alaska, May 18— Ketchikan secured the lowest bondr interest rate ever given an Alaska |city when the City Council here| awarded a $150,000 general obliga- | tion bond bid to Blyth and Com- pany of Seattle. The interest 1alr f |of the Blyth bid is one and one-| - half per cent, with premium u‘ . . $780 on bonds dated June 1, 1945. ln One other bid at the same in-| C | terest rate but lower premium was | received, along with several bids | at one and three-fourths per cent.! ustar Offers were made by Seattle, | | Chicago, Philadelphia and anwu] ! concerns adds that “just right” flavor and tang The bond issue is to finance the Beaver Falls hydro-electric pro]e(‘t; for the municipal power and light 3-MASTSCHOONER BACK ON CODFISH BANKS ONCEMOR SEATTLE, May Charles R. Wilson, only Seattle cod- fishing vessel not requisitioned for wartime Government service, has reached the banks on her twenty- | cighth fishing cruise, her owner was ladvised today. She sailed with 26/ men under Capt. Knute Capt. Shields also announced he had re-purcha a 165-foot barge, C. A Thayer, which was a three-masted <( hooner when requisitioned for war service DISROBING ACT | IN COURT SENDS WOMANT0 JAIL NELSON, B. C., May 18.—(Canad- |ian Press) —Five of nine Doukhobors | Estuary charged with disrobing in a public place were sentenced to terms rang- —_— e RN ¥ R < P ROCKAS IN JUNEAU { facility |‘ John A. Rockas, of Seattle, is registered at the Baranof Hotel. { GIBSON IN JUNEAU LeRoy C. Gibson, of Seattle, hn” |arrived in Juneau and is a guest | lat the Gastineau Hotel. : Sponge Layers for Your -, - JOINING HUSBAND Mrs. E. K. Farrell, of Ketchikan, ! boarded an Alaska Airlines plane here yesterday bound for Cordova | to join hern Forester husband, who | was recently transferred to Cor- |dova from the Southern Division | Headquarters in the First City. Their two-and-one-half-month-old son is with Mrs. Farrell ————e—i— | Shor l cake | FORS BACK IN JUNEAU | | Mr. and Mrs. F. Fors returned to their home in Juneau this morn- | _iing on the North Sea, after spend- ling the winter in Seattle. Early | | today they were at work in their | garden Gardens around Seattle are not imuch ahead of those in Juneau, Mrs. | Fors said, as the weather has been | |cold and rainy down there, and it {is a pleasant surprise to come home |to the sort of weather Juneau is now enjoying. | "&" SUNDAY? | S TRUE AS | DECENCY WILL PERMIT! Super Mariet Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Phone—Write or Wire George Brothers FRESH OHN FARROW 20™ CENTURY Make Your Selection from Qur ling from three months in the city | |jail to two years in the penitentiary cautious | yesterday after one of their number, | force |Mary Tamelin, completely undress- ed in the court room | Three others, one man and two, wemen, pmtlall} disrobed. NEW DIMES 10 | BEAR LIKENESS OF ROOSEVELT WASHINGTON, May 18.—Frank- lin D. Roosevelt’s likeness is going on a new 10-sent piece. | Treasury Secretary Morgenthau {announces that the new dimes— which will eventually replace all dimes now in circulation—will be minted “just as promptly as we can” and that they will be ready for dis- tribution about the end of this year. Morgenthau, at a news confer- ence, also announced that President Roosevelt’'s picture and a suitable quotation will be placed on a war kond to be issued later this year for | tthe 8th Loan. R LUTHERAN YOUNG PEOPLE'S GLACIER TRIP POSTPONED The proposed trip of theran Young People to Herbert Glacier is postponed one week to May 27, due to the High ing Young people at the service on outing. B JOHN McCORMICK BACK John McCormick, Territorial bl- rector of Selective Service, has re- turned to Juneau via Pan Ameri- can, from a three-week conference in Washington, D. C, at the State Director’s meeting. “There has | been no changes in policy Mr. McCormick said, “and we will keep on inducting until further instruc- tions.” e - JAMESTOWN, N. Y. — Norman Robinson tried to talk blood bank authorities into letting him give a pint of blood from each arm sim-| ultaneously. Failing, he gave ms, twenty-third single pint. Complete Stock . . . Cabbage Cucumbers Celery Artichokes Cauliflower Parsley Lettuce Yams Bunch Carrots Rhubarb Asparagus Parsnips Parsnips Rutabagas GreenOnions New Potatoes Solid Ripe Tomatoes Apples Grapefruit Oranges Calavos Lemons Dates Golden Ripe Bananas EORGE BROTHER Super Market Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Phones 32-35—2 Free Deliveries Daily DARIGOLD—Sweet Cream LARGEST—FRESHEST EGGS - HILLS COFFEE HOME STYLE—HUNT |PEACHES KRISTOFFERSON'S COTTAGE CHEE | | | | | { | VEGET 10:15 A. M. DOUGLAS DEL DHONF o — e 2 dozen$1.09 and LOTS of FRESH TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES MINIMUM—$2.50 AR er CASH GRO 2 Ibs. 99« Pound 38« (ase $8.79 SE - Pkg. 29( ABLES 2:15 P. M. IVERY 10 A. M. £s CERY B ] N 18.—Capt. K. E.| Shields’ three-masted schooner, the! Pearson. | |been poured into Naha and other 'DEPORTATION TO | German-American the Lu-! School | | Baccalaureate service Sunday” even- Sunday will arrange an afternoon | fMAYOR RETURNS; CITY FATHERS WILL | might be postponed should he not | arrive back in time to attend. |MRS. GEORGE 3 DEFENSES WEDS, SEATTLE sWEEVEY HERE | R E p 0 R 'I'ED HOLD MEET TONIGHT .c:: j“mwx“;;r:x‘m? ¢ olindie ! ()'HA:LOR::N‘I‘NV JU;‘EA[‘ | Of interest to friends in Juneau is the announcement of the marriage in Seattle on May 10, of Mrs. Lillian George and Angelo Paglia. Esther George was maid of honor for her stepmother, and Norman Woodring was the best man. The couple will make their home in Tacoma, Washington. Mrs. Paglia is the sister of Mrs. Joe George, and a former resident of Juneau. Arrival back in Juneau this after- | noon of Mayor Ernest Parsons, by plane from Seattle, assured that the regular semi-monthly meeting of the Juneau City Council will be held —— | this evening as scheduled—at 8 o'clock in the City Hall. The Mayor has been in Seattle for some days on business and it had been thought that the meeting Edwin C. O'Halloran, of the Todd Packing Company at Todd, has ar- rived in Juneau and is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. - DOUGLAS PEOPLE Can avail themselves of the Royal Blue Cab. Phone 14, at their Cab Stand 24 hours daily (Adv.) CRUMBLING (Continued Irom Page One) (knocked out the enemy’s greatest oil storage areas on the home islands This was accomplished in a three- fold Superfortress strike May 10, |B-29 headquarters on Guam an- nounced, as smaller bombers de- stroyed 15 oil warehouses at Balik- |papan on Borneo and set fire to oil depots on Formosa. 0il Areas Regained Australians, regaining the first {oil producing areas of the East Indies, drove to within a mile of the east coast of Tarakan, off Bmmo Sixth Division Marines expanded their bridgehead across the Asato into the heart of rubble- |strewn, sniper-infested Naha, capi- tal of Okinawa. While few Japa- nese were seen, the Marines moved \ fearing strong enemy might be hidden in the wrecked buildings in the southern part of the port city. Some 25,000 tons of naval artillery shells have VEGETABLES Are Always the BEST! FRESH VEGETABLES for HOT WEATHEB! Artichokes Okinawa defenses. GERMANY SLATED FOR BUND CHIEF \‘A\SIII'\!(‘TOV M(n 18—Former Bund leader Fritz Kuhn has been ordered de- ported to Germany as an undesir- able alien, the Justice Department announced today. The Justice Department said the White Turnips Cucumbers 49-year-old native of Munch, who Green Beans New Potatoes Green Onions as convicted in 1939 of larceny and forgery involving German- SPmach Bunch Beels Radishes American Bund funds, will be | £ placed on a boat at & time to be Fresh Peas Parsmps—Yams Celery etermined by American military N s authorities in Germany. B Broccoli Idaho Baker Potaloes Texas Grapefruit | . CCCUPATION OF Cauliflower Lettuce Apples Oranges , /W Asparagus Tomatoes Rhubarb REICH ZONE BY 'l New Cabbage Avocados Bananas FRENCH LIKELY B Bunch Carrois Green Peppers Lemons | WASHINGTON, May 18—Presi- | dent Truman told the French | Foreign Minister today the United States is willing to relinquish to France a part of the American | zone of occupation in Germany. The President, following a con- | ference with Minister Georges Bi- dault, issued a statement saying details of the relinquishment “have already been conveyed informally to the French Government and are | now in the process of being for- malized." | Mr. Truman expressed a desire to meet Gen. Charles de Gaulle, head of the French Provisional Government. PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries—10 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Roat Orders Delivered Anytime! s ALASKA s3> MEAT COMPANY Juneaw’s Finest and Largest Meat Stock Z-Free-2 Deliveries Daily Phones Always the Best-- - Courteous Service with Prices that Are Right Makes Our Shop Popular! Yol RUMP ROAST - Ib. 54¢|RIB ROAST - - Ib.53¢ Pound 1 c--TURKEYS-—Pound 61« b. 17¢ DILL PICKLES - 2 for 1 5¢|LAMB STEW L.A.STURM New Crop Breast Pleasant Eating ¥ e | o ‘ .y