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PAG! | wrameeem EIGHT HELLO, DARLING! ) AP Newsfeatures I art of date selection, Audrey Christie, in ‘Voice of the Turtle,’ de an early date, and succumb to another more fascinating one. Nostaigic, isn't it? NOBODY IMPORTANT. ... OF COURSE ID ( RATHER BE WITH VOU/ ¢+ JUST A SICK FRIEND CIRCLE AREA IS UNDER FLOOD, Yukon Also Inundated | Ice jams in the Yukon River have | ,resulted in serious flood conditions 'reported from Circle and Fort Yu- |kon, according to advices received |in Juneau by the Alaska Native Ser-| | vice. | High waters at Circle are report- land equipment. The ANS office | bere has authorized the hiring of | i workers to clear away results of the | flcod. The Indian School teact | already departed for the sum- Dr. Burpee’s job is to keep the programs in USOs adjusted to the rapid changing military personnel a; it has been found that with the progressing of the war, military aud- jences become increasingly bored Consequently, he is trying to reduce this by producing “live” shows in the various camps. When asked how the USOs compare with others, Dr. Bur- pee said, “USO clubs are exceptional only when the complete support of | the community is had—Alaska is the | best example of the true American way of working together I have| seen.” As'to the plans for the future, Dr. Burpee asid: “Our slogan is ‘USO, | last to go’ and as long as our boys | are overseas and have a need for a USO there will be a USO. For those men who are returning to civilian life this organization has ived as N THIS time of manpower shortage, the days when a gid could pick and choose the more” desirgble of two weekend dates seem pretty far away. For gals out of training in this gentle \ { okay, you \ High Water Reaches ANS;' | School Buildings - Fort 1‘ led to have swept up into the ANS || school buildings, damaging supplies || lett | ¢ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1945 [WHAT! YOURE ONLY INY) \TOUN TILL TOMORROW, g’ o WHEW! NOW WHAT WILL T TELL THE OTHER ” Guy...! monstrates how to brush off| WIN ...m) I\ MEET YoU INA Y { JlFF\//‘ ' as head of the Chemistry Depart- ment at the University of Alaska | for the college term beginning Sep- tember 17, this year. Mr. Xoelsche hak been very active and well-liked during his one term in Douglas and it is regretted that he will not be on the faculty next year, but is congratulated on his advancement. While on the Douglas staff, Mr. | Koelsche organized and perfected a nine-piece orchestra which was lack- | ing at the school and also improved the chemistry rooms. Mrs. Koelsche has also worked in Douglas during the past year on the Feusi and Jensen Grocery staff. is leaving next Monday for Valdez, ! Alaska, where both will be employed | by the Alaska Road Commission during the summer vacation months. | ICE CREAM AT SCHOOL A surprise ice cream party was| given to students of the Douglas | High School and its faculty yester- day afternoon by Superintendent Eleancr Warren llowing the par ty the report cards and diplomas . | were issued to the students. i A e STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, May 26 — Closing quotation of Alaska-Juneau Mine stock today is 7', American Can 101'i, Anaconda 34'2, Curti { Wright 6, International Harvester | 187, Kennecott 38%, New York | Central 281, Northern Pacific 31, U. S. Steel 67. Sales today were 700,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages today are as ! follows: Industrials, 166. I | 57.46; utilities, 30.96. CURTIS IN JUNEAU T. R. Curtis, salesman from | Ketchikan, has arrived in Juneau publicity burean they can look land is a guest at the Gastineau forward to being greeted offic- | Hotel. ially by Miss Jacqueline Ward | (above), 18-year-old high school ‘ student. (AP Wtrpehoto) | | Visitors at Miami Beach during | June are told by that city's - eee HEALTH COUNCIL MEETS ! The Gastineau Public Health | Council will hold its last meeting of ——— e - | the current year on Monday, May 128, at 8 p. m. and election of officers DOUGLAS *:+% | Feature of the evening will be a {resume of the work on the “Hy- | giene,” the Territory’s new health | boat, by a member of the Heaith | Department. staff. | .- — The Mike Pusich family pulled a | POLICE COURT FINES fast one on Douglas people today | 1n City Police Court here, Magis- The couple | rails, | Y \ | I and - - - MOTHER HURLS 4 TODEATH GLASGOW, Mont., May 26 — A 24-year-old mother of six children hurled four of them to death in the Milk River yesterday, Sheriff E. L. McPherson said, then plunged from a bridge to her own end in the WEDDING TONGHT 5% v - FORLOCAL COUPL { | | i MOLOTOV, THAILAND - EDEN IN INVASION I GREETINGS ~ PLANNED | g | . | CALCUTTA, May 26 British Both Agree that Continued | rouricentn Army troops i Burma, f . consolidated positions north of GOOd Relations Will Mactaban Gulf for a possible in- |vasion of Thailand, have captured Insure Peace the village of Mokshitwa, in | Mcpes, northwest of the rail center LONDON, May 26—Foreign Sec-|of Pevu, controlling the railway to retary Anthony Eden and Soviet the east. Foreign Commissar Vyacheslav Mo-! Farther north another enemy {lotov exchanged greetings today on|holdout point near Winkanein, was the third anniversary of the 20-; r|shelled an dtaken. | Anglo-Soviet alliance, and agreed| Heavy bombers of the EaStern Ithat continued good relgtions be- Air Command attacked Japanese |tween Britain and Soviet Russia!communications on the Malay Pen- |would help insure lasting peace. Eden said the first aim of the on the Kra Isthmus {alliance—defeat of Hitler Germany japanese waters, | —had been achieved, and reminded | the Soviet Foreign Commissar: | “Now we are in the posi-war stage |in which, in accordance with our| treaty, we agreed on close and {friendly collaboration, taking into consideration the interests of the other United Nations, and without striving for any territorial acquisi- tions for ourselves, as well as re |fraining from interference into the internal affairs of other states. “I am confident as ever, that if our two countries remain true to the spirit of the Anglo-Soviet al- liance and to subsequent agreements | in which both our countries partici- pate, then all Europe can look for- |ward to lasting peace and general [dm‘el()pnwni." |from Glasgow, escaped death by swimming to the rocky shore and | a8 | was quoted by the sheriff that his Miss Ethel Loken, daughter of Mr. | mother, Mrs. Andrew Campbell, and Mrs. Hans Loken of Juneau, “hit me on the head with a ham- |and Mr. Charles Gray of Seattle, mer” and threw him into the water engineer with an ATS boat stationed first. | here, will be united in marriage this| Shortly after the drownings, re- | evening at 8 o'clock, at the Resur- ported by Johnny to his aunt and rection Lutheran Church. The Rev. | his grandmother near Glasgow, G. Herbert Hillerman will officiate. | the father of the children handed Friends of the bridal couple are|the ‘sheriff a note he said was in invited to the wedding and to the | his wife’s handwriting. It began: recepticn which will follow at their | “I know I am going crazy fnture home, 229 Franklin Street. | The rest was illegible. e Campbell said the deaths came BUY WAR BONDS las a “complete shock.” | | | | | | BRITISH - NAWYTO AID U. S. LONDON, May 26—A. V. Alex- ander, First Lord of the Admiralty in the Coalition Government, an- nounced today there would be only a “token” demobilization of men in the British Navy because that branch of the service was planning to throw its maximum strength against the Japanese as soon as possible. C ee— ARRESTED, - RELEASED | ROME, May 26—Pietro Nenni, | Italian Socialist leader arrested in | northern TItaly for addressing a jpublic gathering without Allied permission, has been released with (a warning, Italian sources said to- ' day. insula yesterday, bombing shipping mining | Nenni's arrest at Vecelli for vio- lation Allied Military Government | regulations brought sharp reper- cussions here from Socialists and | Communists and expressions of concern from conservatives. Nenni ‘has been mentioned as a possible successor to Premier Ivanoe Bo- nomi. S eee - LOS ANGELES — Jessie Sachs, driving home from a theatre, re- marked that “The old bus sounds pretty sweet.” The motor continued to hum rhythmically after she cut off the ignition in the garage. That called for an inspéction. On the hood she discovered a swarm of bees. — e GREEN RETURNS R. S. Green, Director of the Di- vision of Public Health Engineering, Territorial Department of Health, returned yesterday afternoon, via ‘Woodley Airways, from a trip to Kodiak and Anchorage on official depariment business. “ " HOW MUCH TO MOVE AWAR? If you have an income—whether from’ work, land, or capital —you have a quota in the 7th War Loan. Be sure to make it! 8 8OON as we can, we'll bring to bear A on the Japs all the additional might we've been using against*Germany. = ‘What willit cost, thisMoving Day of War? Estimate it in these terms: The job of moving millions of men from one front to i FiND YOUR QUOTA —AND MAKE ITI ( | s T | YOUR PERSONAL MATURITY ] —When Vercurd | McKinney and Doc Maness were chased by a bull while fishing they went over a fence in record time. ‘Then they had to run ag: ! they climbed was only a secti | fence open at both e e BUY WAK BONDS . ? | Program Director of OVer- riinch puees agency arm said to- SeaS USO He{e Afler day that “according to unconfirmed C former Governor General of | Japa e~occupied French Indo-| Dr. Royal H. Burpee, Program former commander-in-chief of the Director for Overseas USOs of New Indo-China Armed Forces, “are rer via Woodley Airways, from Anchor- |Japanese.” age, where he has been visiting their D2Coux and Ayme were placed He left today for Sitka and will j Japanese March 9 this year, when have then completed a 66,000-mile |the Japanese completed the total in Newfoundland, along the Atlantic | - > coast and south as far as Rio pAN AMER'(AN TAKES OUT TEN o reports have been rec but ation is less than that A Pan American World Airway Papslderale. oo Alaskan [neau from Seattle yesterday and re- e “Knl‘x Sranc turned to Seattle with 10 passengers. ' 3 gers were: Barnita S Mathiida |OT5CI81S- AR R | c 1, Wiley Parsons, Clifford! Lt. Comdr. John Newmarker, Ju- David | ; M fiianks Rol. Crads Welch, R. O, Pierce, Anton Anderson | .08 Wired to Fairbanks Red Cro el S carl lief is needed, either at Circle or at| iftonr Ras e Mm“l‘;‘wmon Yukon, where flood conditions Perkins, Pau ricks pis} xS XepO erkins, Pauline Erickson, DOs|qaq pe had received no reply. ien, Rosemary O'Donald and Jill TRl O'Donald. | TWO WO zatlon A8 | senger to Fairbanks. R e e e SALIY TO Liwhe who are v ve Jobs | munities. Through these councils, | Hosp"Al NOTES SALES v'ou"o“s[ discharged veterans have the oppor- | different parts of the country. and M Trevor Davis, underwent 3V{t_tu‘y _Caf"? hm'b: :f"_d ‘Lnnn.y“\v‘n;n.e.‘ Dr. Burpee will return to Juneau |an appendectomy at 1 p, m. Friday | V3¢S each. charged with two for New York to prepare for a trip| Mrs. Irene Lee entered St. Ann's|® T\"x'r;‘..m-iul lpsuge, F"ang0d11¥'t)lr; to the Hawaiian Islands. Hospital Priday for medical cave, |PIcAS from not guilty to guilty in lleft St. Ann's Hospital yesterday to| "%, ; : | by picking up bag and baggage (With | trate William ‘A. Holzheimer has | Iwo wooDlEY |return to their home. | The two women waived time for hardly a word to anyone), grabbed | fineq Richard D. Carrigan $25 on Government Hospital for treatment.| »Do‘pui).' Mu?}hal 'Hfllun and Mrs. combined businos; and pleasure trip | pailed into court on drunk and di- plA“ES BRI“G | ‘Bahy-Michael Rose has been | Rogers as to what was found by the | to accompany their newly-graduated | orderly charges: Betty Marle Heller { for . : 2 | medical care. "|at the time the arrests were made Devon and Wilfred Rice to Seattle. | and E. G. Richardson $25. Frank Mrs. C. E. Nash and infant son g 4 3 Rogers, judgment was given by the out are Mike, Mrs. Pusich, Laiy, | fined $20. Hospital, | court. | Louie, Ann and big brother Mickey. ! O D Woodley Airways, Art Woodley Mrs. Harold Jones and baby boy s el pilot, had full loads from Anchorage | 5 s g At {to return to their home at Angoon.'mmm‘s syepeadaily satilrcn o0, tha The incoming plane brought| Mrs. Paul Wilson was an incoming | Thelma Killeen, Major Green, James Ann’s| DES : Winters, Philip Ruen, G. E. Allen,;Hospital. {of 60 days on the second count w son, i B ce, Eric| Mrs. Ronal a ar and| John Olofson, Royal Burpee, Eric nald John and Harold '111(1‘““0% suspended, Judge George F. Hellenthal. have been dismisser from the Gov- Alexander made the condition that| Vil yes y 8 ¥ for | ernment S X ¢ A Leaving yesterday afternoon T nt Hospital ol g Iowakbidbin Eitincthe aud nik lip. Thorpe, Crenda Thorpe, Ray-|St. Ann's Hospital yvesterday as a|88ain! commit the offense charged.; Mueller, Charles Hoskins, Don Fos-| Mrs. George Katveek ‘and baby|fpoaestmer Judde Mlexander de- ter, H. Smith and Sgt. Wallenstein. left the Government Hospital and|C o cd: Trial of the two women ha with Ernie Davis as pilot, brought | wan. Major Marston and Mrs. Whitsett to| Paul Joseph of Douglas has been "o"hern Airways ed with S. W. Jenkins, Paddy Thom- Hospital, where he has been under-| as, Richard McCormick, Wiley Par-|going treatment ) f Lawrence as passengers 1 For pi(king up Mail senger to Gustavus. G. F. Krenzke | i | and LeRoy West flew to Kakutat HAS BIRTHDAY‘ ANCHORAGE, Alaska, May 26 | Northern Airways has asked CAB| John Edward Nielson, son of Mr. | pick up mail sacks hanging on rope: jand Mrs. E. S. Nielsen, is celebrat- stretched between poles in small in- ente ning 14 of his young friends| They also applied for permission | at a theatre party “ollowing the to operate service virtually to every n home at 128 Dixon for ice, the Yukon River Valley and Ku?kn—‘; cream and cake kwim country, including 125 places, The automotive indy ¥ Bethel | 1945 with a production rate B sald no antomatic pickup 1.-;} | | | | SAN FRANCISCO, May 26.—The rumors” Vice Admiral Jean De- Extensive Trip Chin: and Gen. Georges Ayme, York, arrived in Juneau yesterday, ported to have been shot by the USO there. under “protective custody” by the trip which has taken him to USOs | ccupation of French Indo-China. BRINGS N NINE, to conditions in the village of Circle Slipper flew nine passengers to Ju- : my be anticipated there, al- From Beattle to Junsan: passen.|(C Hgher ground, according to A Goodman, Don Westfall, ineau Red Cross chairman this morn- | headquarters to determine if re- To Seattle: Joseph Malloy, rted similar. To noon to- Brown, Rose Suszenski, Thelma Kil- The Rev. Louis Fink was the pas- MEN plEAD in all major industries in their com- | tunity of stepping into open jobs in| Patricia Davis, daughter of Mr.| Nona Rogers proprietor of thej early next week and will then leave and is doing nicely. punts of selling intoxicants without Sl e e Mrs. Eugene Nelson and baby boy| D S District Court P e oy Senton James has entered “the ntence and after questioning of U.|a PAA plane and scooted off on a | a drunk and disorderly charge. Also ad-| .« " ) “: . 3 a |mitted to St. Ann’s Hospital raiding officers at the Victory Cafe|son, Mickey, and companions Bill | was fined $100; Nels Johnson $25 12 pASSENGERS and as to the past reputation of Mrs. | Members of the Pusich family going | pouville, charged with speeding, w have been dismissed from St. Ann's Mrs. Rogers was fined $500 on the | This is the first trip the family has | MARRIED HERE | eft the Government Hospital today | 1"t Count and was given to Juneau and return yesterday. | second. Miks “OWArhe “wms fined medical patient Friday at St 18100 on the first count and sentenc |suspended. In ordering the jail sen- Conn, John Leontowich and Judge, Wallec Frank, all of Angoon, ‘lhe two women conduct themselves | Anchorage were: 1. C. Ingram, Phil-| Maurice Nelson wa: mond Stafford, M. D. Williams, Louis | medical patient. “There is no reason for tolerating| This morning a Woodley plane, returned to their home at Kluck#h”‘n it i Juneau from Anchorage and return- |dismissed from the Go\'vrnmenll s e e iy s veamar, = 721 Wanis fo Use Hooks Mrs. E. Dalyrimple was the pas- JOHN E NEII_SEN ! approval to use grappling hooks to| ing his seventh birthday today by | terior communities. | how, the youngste will go to the community from Fairbanks down to| > lon seven routes from Barrow to| cess of $10,000,000,000 annuall ;r.:,w used in the Territory. began week that he has aceepted a position taken outside together and is the' Rijley .J. Endicott, of Sitka, and first trip for the three younger Gertrude M. Buchanan, of Juncau, children. Two other daughters, Mrs. | were wed here yesterday afternoon Wallen Forrest and Mrs. Guy RUsso, | py U. S. Commissioner Felix Gray. are remaining here to supervise their | witnesses to the ceremony were the father’s business interests while he | pride’s brother and sister-in-law, is away. Their plans in the States | Mr, and Mrs. E. G. Buchanan. and time there are indefinite, but - e ey be, a:anonfh. gEfmpre. GETS SIX MONTHS { At a hearing before U. S. Com- TO TEACH AT UNIVERSITY missioner Felix Gray here yesterday Charles Koelsche, chemistry teach- | afternoon, Floyd Kenneth Peterson er in the Douglas Public Schools | pleaded guilty to assault and bat- during the last term announced this | tery and was sentenced to serve six months in jail. PUERTO RICAN LIGHT RUM Pints - - $1.95 HalfPints - $1.20 IF YOUR AVERAGE INCOME PER MONTH IS: another. Thousands of ships to carry the supplies of battle. Swarms of new-type air- craft to blast the path into enemy territory. You can get an idea of the cost from the fact that Uncle Sam needs 7 billions from us in the mighty Seventh War Loan—now! The Seventh War Loan will call for the greatest bond- buying we have ever done. $250 225-250 210-225 200-210 180-200 140-180 100-140 Under $100 SE PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries— i0 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Juneau Liquer Co. PHONE 498 This is an official U.S. Treasury advertisement — prepared under the WAR BOND QUOTA Is: (CASH VALUE) VALUE OF 7th WAR LOAN ALL OUT FOR THE MIGHTY 7# WAR LOAN