The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 10, 1945, Page 3

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TUESDAY, JULY | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE THREE IFIRES STILL EISENHOWER IN ~ | TRIBUTE TODAY | MENACEB.C. 1o Lame om ® e 00 v v o s . WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Period Ending 7:30 o'Clock This Morning In Juneau—Maximum, 57; minimum, 50; precipitation .61 inch. At Airport-—Maximum, 57; minimum, 48; precipitation, 46 inch. esceecc00cc0over ey | 7 | ; HYDE PARK, N. Y., July 10; | N L | a simple, solemn ceremony Gen | { of By & Fécovikt &l '(vdny p:\dld :rlkg]ltf‘ Imb msl 1;;n Jommander-in-Chief by placi WI.B ""eaf fo Closed ShOD A partly cloudy this afternoon et R s by Brifish, American . |3 Showess weanestay. ite o fions Closed in Threat- | accomsacied by avs. Roosey . e o o . & o H Commanders R LT . ened Section head bowed, stood in silent. pr 1 RS P Y ¢ , for several seconds bafore the RiApak i NEW YORK, July 10.—Louis Wal H ey the problem of feeding the nearly forest fires on Vancouver Island nhower's bribf, Wisit was - and Mail Deliverers Union (Ind.), v | > 3 3 erms civili i | was rning controlle: ay agnounced and “oH1¥! &' handrul{pf ann: o that U £fi- 3,000,000 German civilians in Ber NFWS was burning uncontrolled today but 2unounce Jtcinced: edar thss, Untian otfl-) In, it was cfficially announced to- | 4 . » n t —_ | temperatures caused fears of large- friends witnessdd the eeremony,jfn hip immediate! >termin 4 2 s T ffihifl- t,gmc]afilz(rxl{lwemsu(i\k::\vx;::. A An official statement said Soviet | GO TUNA FISHING scale devastation if brisk winds addition to Army officials and prdss s hal 5 L i e i . B ) : farshal Gregory K. Zhukov, Amer- | oo, 8 | York gefim‘:fc‘;j"m‘m‘j days il 5 ; o (ot ; . : ; ican Lt. Gen. Lucius D, Clay and | Rustad, local fishermen and boat| The Forestry Branch Office at e 2 i o0 il s s s. 8 | British Lt Gen. Sir Ronald Weeks|<Wners, pooled their fishing equip-| vancouver said no new reports had the Army Dwight D. Eisenho i it Mostly cloudy tonight, e| i i v Russian Position Accepted b oudy tonene. o || ogging, Induslrial Opera- wreath on e srave of the § i mpt Actio . < . Bnngs Pro el s bt e ki the Supreme Allied Commander, ! BERLIN, July 10. — The three D‘)L]fivfi Ag | VANCOUVER, B. C., July 10 marked grave in the garden of man, aftorney for. the Newspape Allied powers have amicably solved | 1571 V] [\ (CP)—Only one of the three major ancestral Roosevelé jestitie { har o o 3 oEeve) A ke ] e clals would canvass.the full mem- | . | continued dry weather and high the Rogsevelt faially and sofh nigh Ralph Mortenson and Norman gpring up. and nowsreel reprosentatives. ! Wal Uni icials, atan T i oo e had decided that Berlin's food |Tent this wcekend and steered a|peen received from the fire fronts headed by President Joseph Simons, decided on such a course after the War Labor Board said the Union whuld loce its closed shop if the men did not return to work by 8 a. m. tomorrow. - BIGGER'N USUAL oo i CROP 0" CORN IS SEEN THIS YEAR WASHINGTON, July 10.—A corn crop of 2685328000 bushels and wheat production totaling 1,128,690,- 000 bushels were forecast today by the Agricultural Department on the basis of July 1 conditions. The corn forecast, the first indi- cation of the size of - this crcp, compared with last year's ducticn of 3,228,361,000 which broke all records. The aver- age yearly harvests in the ten years, 1934-1943, were 2,433,060,000 b S, Luzon, shows rugged type of wer ROUGH COMBAT COUNTTI Y_Aerial view of the Villa Verde trail near San Nicholas, ch the 32nd division fought the Japs. would be supplied by “contributions | course for Astoria fishing grounds, | since last night but from company | from all the Allied Uccupn(mni 70 in Germany.” Presumably American and British transport systems will bring con- | siderable stocks of both food and | fuel into the American and Bri- ! tish sectors of Berlin from the oc-) cupation zones in western Ger-| many. The British-American de-|{ ; mand had been for all of Berlin to! be suppled from its Soviet-held ! hinterland.. There are 1,650,000, Germans in the American and| British zones in Berlin. ; ST 3 TR A, LAST RITES FOR FRANK Puget Sound, for a try at the tuna ftishing game. Leaving on the lat- Ilr‘r‘z; boat, the -partners, will satisfy a lonzing they have cherished for ne time, whether tuna fishing is a beiter gamz than the Alaska sal- mon fishing, The families of both are remaining at their homes here. CITY COUNCIL MEETS The Douglas City Ceuncil met Jast evening at a regular meeting for the disposal of routine business. Only new business was the approv- al of a taxi stand licence to Lee | B. Swift and Ernie Asselin with the | stand to be located at the Douglas area is still out of control sweeping tion. , Peter Olsen, 26-year-old logger ing the fire. The Vancouver Island and south- ern mainland forest areas were closed, stopping all logging and in- dustrial operations becausz of ihe acute fire hazard. - e, — MRS. JORGENSON HERE Prayers will be said for the late | Frank Botelho tomorrow ~evening ! at 7:30 o'clock at the Chapel of the | Charles W, Carter Mortuary. 1 lequiem Mass will be { Thursday morning at 9 o'clock in| the Church of the Nativity. Pall- cavers will be Frank Hungerlord,‘ Steve Vukovich, Joe Thibodeau, | John Monagle, Albert Forrest and BETTY BONNETT LEAVES Miss Betty Bonnett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bonhnett of Dcuglas left this morning ‘on the Charles Tuckett, They will stop in restdent of Juneau, is home for the | first time in 10 years, and is visit- ing her mother Mrs. Anna Webster, fand sister, Mrs. Minnie Hurley. !With her are her two daughters, saiq | North Sea, accompanied by Mrs,|Joanne and Jean. | Both Mr. and Mrs. Jorgenson are tha Lake Logging Company opera- | | Seattle for awhile visiting trlends}wollknnwn here, having grown up and then continue to San Francis-'in Juncau. Ten years ago they lo- co, Calif., where Miss Bonnett will|cated in Seattle, where he is Alaska ! visit her father's mother and other!representative for the Standard Oil IMPARTIAL | officials it was learned that the 2,-| QUAKERTOWN, Pa. — Sha 000-acre blaze in the Lake Cowichan | 0 favorites, fire destoyed the st | End PFire Company here. Flathe i through felled and bucked timber on | fighters saved the engines. KODIAK WOMEN HERE! Leona Smith and Nita Brm; missing since Sunday, walked into|©f Kodiak, are guests at the Rounds, B. C,, last night after skirt- | tineau Hotel, :I [ ————— | EVERETT MEN HERE' | 3. C. Lewis and Earle Mackby, Washington Stove Works repfe- sentatives from Everett, are guests at the Hotel Juneau. i | e B Mr. and Mrs, Ray Wolfe, daugher Joanne returned to neau teday after several week§ \1& iting in the South, £k - D 5 B. F. Kane, uraveling mai, fe- companied by Mrs. Kane, left jon the Nerth Sea for Petershurg —_———— ] IN POLICE COURT |. ! Petér A. Hanson, charged! with being drunk and disorderly, gnd @Gerald S. Dallas, on a drunk I:pgm, were each fined $25 here in Qity yrelatives before entering further|Co, | Police Court this morning — e - R. Gilligan. | educational career studies. Miss o A o A COASI GUARD To 3 3 Gy ‘ BERc ‘ v 3 4 5 Interment will be in the Ameri- ‘ 3 B A"EMPT RES(UE . : S o can Legicn Plot in Evergreen Cem- | Bonnett was a 1944 Douglas grad- o ' . » s . 5 » » ¢ ctery. | uate, since then being employed by S OF 11 S l FQ& ol en e . . ? 4 - . % S i [ the Territorial Health Department | \ ” AR 1 3 ok = - i Yoaugs B {as a stenographer. A very popular | 4 0 Di-‘ - : - NORIHLA”D ARR'VES girl on Gastineau Channel, Betty | | jwill be deeply missed by both old, 7 p $ NARSARSSUAK, Greenland, July FROM SOUTH; SA“.S !uud young friends. Mrs. Tuckett | 10—Col. Eugene Rice, Commander ! will visit friends enroute both ways of the Greenland Base Command, FOR Smfl WITH SEVE" and return sometime in Auzust.f said today a Coast Guard cutter P Pl : Mrs. Tuckett and Miss Bonnétt are | would attempt this month to The Northland arrived late last!active Rainbow officers and will| relieve and evacuate 11 American night with the following passengers | Visit other lodges while traveling. soldiers trapped in a bleak-weather- from the South: { Mrs. Tuckett is Mother Adyisoy for radio outpost. From Seattle: J. E. Haviland,| Gastineau Channel and Miss Bon-) The men have been supplied by air The Rev. Lester Justice, Mrs. Lester i nett just completed a ‘term | as| Justice and J. F. Szabo. Worthy Advisor of the Order of| since-January 8, when a huge sr slide burled their stores, equipme " — i Frem Ketchikén: Mrs. John Mills, | Rainbow Girls. and all but one of their buildinzs, SEABEES AT WORK ON GUAM-_Navy Scabees work on installations on Guam, now Frem Wrangell: George Murray, in Skjoldungen, tiny outpost on the advanced headquarters for the commander-in-chief, U. S. Pacific fleet. From Petersburg: Miss Alfreda PROPERTY TRANSFER cast coast of Greenland. OS5 i | Dore, Mrs. Charlotte Fleek, Master| J0sePh Wehren sold some of his i 20 RS Dale Fleek, Miss Andrea Fleck and | Property, lot 3 block 14, this week | to O. H. Bliss. ! High Command anno Il e a . ) TAYU !N K’ANGSE AR H | Master . Roger Fleek. orlh (’y"‘g Abo“' " Chir spearhcads, pussuing re- a’or eague | Leaving this morning for Sitka ey | B B i it e o . | were the following: Mrs. Walter MRS. POLLEY HERE i pRovIN(E TAKE% 2048 oy b 18 ¢ | Soboleff, Janet Soboleff, Ivan So-} Mrs. Clayton Polley and her two @ P to 1 ish . sons, Ernest and Roger, have ar- men arrived to lead Robert Mahor . which the U boleff, Miss Nadine Buchanen, Miss | ‘AS jApS REIRE&]’ a Pauline Jackson, Mrs, Mable Mat-|tived in Juneau from Pelican City, from the fume-filled room. = s compelled to T. tocn and J. L. Sawyel where they have been visiting her “But I don't need first aid,” he o E: t Janue k | Yt s mother, Mzs.. Walton. g ! { They are the h protested to flremen who had be-| CHUNGKING, July 10.—Tayu in Vosdlen ey erisiiml | ¥ s s ol Mt lieved his tears came from fighting the heart of Wolfram mi g re- | B i o and Mrs, Burr Johnson, and expect bl ‘ i 2 e i 5, HENDERSON HERE Hl\lan “IO%K'( ;:”ixé"',r:l;“i"“‘y (EDAR “MBERME" ?0 to visit here for several days be- e blaze. gion in Kiangsi Province, 175 miles R. A. Henderson, of Holmes ol BOS g fore returning to theire “Look,” he pointed to a 40-point northeast of Canton and 45 miles i at the Gastineau! cinello of the Chicago White Sox! lOOK OVER SE ALASKA Sk g their+ home in crisp sirloin in the broiler. | southwest of the former U. S. air| yigqel still were the Major Leagues’ lru(l-: o % ———-—— base site at Kanhsien, has been i ing batsmen today but the weath- X | E Regional Forester B. Frank captured by Chinese forces, the | er was cooling off the ancient Am- 7 T8I0 ot COOK LEAVES HERE ~TELL OUR ADVERTISING AGENCY TO PUT OUT ANOTHER AD TO BUY - WAR BONDS/ ST. PAUL, Minn—Smoke poured | from an apartment kitchen as fir - > o - WA BONDS | erican League veteran, slicing his lead to a single point. [Heintzleman was to fly from Ju- neau to Ketchikan this afternoon on the start of a field trip that he Philip A. Schroeder, Ships cook | 1/c, USCG, left Juneau southbound this morning on transfer for as- $20.000,000,000 SPENT ON LIQUOR SINCE PEARL HARBOR uf;fhlca 3;3;: ":Ld 3:;)0 2:‘ d dvrlu:n‘: expected wculd last about one|signment to duty in the States, He danger of losing his lead to Wash- | Week. At Ketchikan, Mr. Heintle-|has been attached to the organiza- ington's George Cass, who pulled | &R is to meet a cedar pole opera-|tion of the Captain of the Port "up to 327, ¥ tor and a cedar lumber mill man,| here. Oty fogn dsicheresin the. Ameri-| SHHE. b8 11 codgues o & o dny P o can League are over the .300 mark, | Yestigating possibilities for cedar;{ MRS. SOBOLEFF TO SITKA AMERICAN BUSINESS MEN'S RESEARCH FOUNDATION: CHIcAGO- No.1019 I the other two being Vern smflwm;umbcr industries in Southeast Al-| Mrs. Walter Soboleff, with her H of the St. Louis Browns, 318, and | k& top GARH | Jac e Ivan, uit e b : | AR s T ay for & g;;;ll;‘gecf-sfitg&WE1s‘s o tk_m il ymk[ Mrs. Charles M. Tuckett is south-[to join her husband, the my‘,‘vs_ 544 3 {bound on the North Sea for a visit|ter Soboleff,- who is ‘engaged in | There was no hit famine in the D ' |National League where Hohm»s"m the states. = o fishing during mf summer seuf)n. ! consecutive game streak reached! Lt 37 and his average soared to .40L.[ There were four regulars with! marks higher than Cuccinello’s. %. | Three batters had 100 or more hits 3] | to none in the American. | Phil Cavarretta of the Chicago Cubs gathered 20 points on a weck- | long hiting spree, zooming to .372, ‘and Brooklyn’s Goody Rosen was up three at 363, Even Whitey Ku-| | rowski ef St, Louls in fourth spot| | at .330 was higher than the Amecr- dcah League leadef, e o, o e d FELDOMY HAVE GUESTS FROM VANCOUVER, B. C. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Feldon have as their house-guests Miss Beatrice Brooks. and Miss Mary Holden, both of Vancouver, B. C., who ar- | |rived on the Princess Norah and { | plan to return on the southbound | trip of the Princess Louise. i i Miss Brooks, who is Secretary of | the B. C. Appraisal Office and Miss | Holden, secretary in the Union Oil 3 | Committee on Alcohol Education NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION M P A N IN THE ‘‘STATES’’ NITED | Bl FLIES BORDER TO BORDER and COAST TO COAST Qrinconvin From Vancouver, B. C. and mm:lh Co. office in Vi , at- Portland, San Francisco, Los es 5 et o v viht o AL Chicago, Boston, New York, Washington e A S g New Low Fares | NED ZENGER HERE 4 m@mn LINES SEATTLE==Fourth ‘Ave. nd Univershty Street VANCOUVER—Goorgla Hotol | 8 1/¢ Ned Zenger, USCG, third son of Mr, and Mrs. Al- | fred Zenger, arrived in Juneau this | afternen on the Princess Louise, (o, | spend a tWo-week furlough visiting L s mother and friends. Y | Ned has been stationed at Attu and other Aleutian posts for '!u-l FOR BATTLESHIP — Somewhere oft Okinawa, 2V, S. battleship fakes aboard | ‘past year, # load of ammunition for renewed bombardment of Japanese positions,

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