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SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1945t j Viceroy had “failed to reach a re-!vas MEMBERS ARE @ quisite measure of agreement” and| REQUESTED TO RETURN | that' the' “Viceroy¢-who- has fnost | CYRTAINS RY . TGESDAY' EFFOR" 'l'o BE"ER | patientlv and assiduously endeavor-| AWVS members who are worki jed to bring the parties mgether.!on the curtains which the AWWi PAGE EIGHT ___THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA : e o SR e |and gold wrist watches, cigarette| Atlanta, Ga. A third plane of sim-| yap & v T R » ‘5055.(:“ that the Mayor *“”“m, re- | NA ZI 7 lE cases, wedding rings, bracelets and| i size is due to join the fleet in| w‘vEll FA".S l“ & [drare’ “nis *letter to . Btack st f}owolr.v of every description,” Bern-|the near ‘fiiture, offiolals of the! , . € A HElD 0“ OUIEI Yeuwch; 40 (8 Rre. d ling wist | |stein added “this was taken from|company stated. The new plane will | ‘Hm Council’s intent 3 | Nazi concentration camp victims, ;.mblo the company to retire from | I.ASI EVEN'NG‘ i : { 1 Tdhe ng"““m was stacked like| use the last of the ‘bush’ type of | | has therefore terminated sittings|is providing for the messhall at ESTHER GEORGE | § | cordwo and one large room held plane from the main air routes| INDIA Gow. FORM lof the conference.” iAdak are’ Foquested ‘1o’ bave; thel | | nothing but securities from almost | viced by the company, officials| I thinboigi | finished and return them to Mrs, ALL SOURCES ted i _ | Oscar E. Arndt, of Ketchikan is Ernest Gruening at the Governor’s LONDON, July 14. — The India a guest at the Baranof Hotel. | House, by next Tuesday. office ~nnounced today that efforts| i every country in the world. The loot inciudes millions of Russian | | rubles and $34,000,000 in U. S. gold | — - | Mayor Ernest Parsons, pursuing | AMUSEMENT PARK TO his program for purchase of public utilitiec—which apparently consists in large part of keeping the citizen- ry in the dark about his moves un-| til too late for opposition opinion to! be expressed—yesterday had City Counci' members informed that a “Special Council Meeting” had been called for last evening, to consider questions concerning public utili- ties. The meeting held, however, was not a formal session, but developed into more than two hours of dis- cussion by the Mayor and Council of a variety of matters pertaining to the City’s business. So the fact that no notice had been given to the public concerning the “special meeting” did not really matter—no formal action was taken. Councilmen, at least three of them, did however take exception to the communication the Mayor had drafted to Black and Veatch concerning that firm's contracting to appraise public utility facilities in Juneau. . At the time the C(duncil vote was | tdken at the last regular meeting to engage Black and Veatch as the | appraisers, it was generally under-j stood that survey of Juneau Water Company facilities would be pre- | sénted as the first objective. The| Mayor's letter, however, put em-| phasis on appraisal of the Alaska‘ Electric Light and Power Company, which has not yet put itself in po-i sition for appraisal by furnishing| all needed data. | FOR VACATION Miss Esther George, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom George, who is in training as a nurse at the Provi- dence Hospital in Seattle, will arrive tomorrow by plane for a two-weeks visit with her parents. She is accompanied by her cousin, Miss Margaret Soucair, of Seattle. Miss Soucair is with the Personnel Department of the Army Engineers. Open house is being held tomor- | row afternoon at the George home at 5 o'clock to welcome them home. e FREAK 'SELF-DUMPING LAKE BE PHOTOGRAPHED IN FALL To take photographs - of the break-up of the glacier which im- pounds T.ake George, back of An- chorage, and of the lake as it dumps into the Knik River follow- ing the break-up, three men re- cently left Anchorage by plane for Lake George. The men, John Quincy Adams, Vic Morgan, veteran guide, and Walter Erickson are planning to prospect in the vicinity of the lake for three weeks prior to the break- up and later will act as guides for a party of California big game hunters who plan to come north in August. - BAVARD HERE George Bavard, of Skagway, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel [OTICE! | | {Concentration Camp Vic-| | fims, Governments Alike Plundered By George Tucker FRANKFURT, Germany, July 1%.| —The pillaged wealth of Nazi oc- cupied Europe, taken from the teeth of murdered Jews and the| | coffers of seized governments alike, | was piiing ceiling high today in the Reichsmark Bank of Frankfurt. | In addition to gold and silver| lmcre were hogsheads of pearls, ru- | bles and sapphires. Wooden cases | held gold and silver fillings from | the teeth of concentration camp victims. Currency experts from the United States Treasury and the Bank of England were identifying and mak- ing an inventory of the Nazi loot. | “An accurate estimate of the to- | tal value can never be made,” said Col. Bernard - Bernstein, Director | of the Finance Division of the U. 8. Group Control Council. In one cache thousands of wed- ding rings stripped from the fin- gers of women victims of the Nazis in Germany, Greece, Poland and :olhcr occupied countries were | strung on ropes like country sau-| sages. We have found barrels of silver, |in the | planes coins. — e, SECOND DC-3 ADDED TO ALASKA AIRLINES‘ ot Juneau” | fleet of | “Starliner Fairbanks” has arrived at Anchorage after be- | jing rebuilt for passenger use in' “Starliner Airlines Joining the Alaska the OPEN IN ANCHORAGE |to form a more representative In- | Featuring a real. merry-go-round.‘d“““ government proposed by Vice- { with horses and other animals, and | Yoy Lord Wavell had failed and a amusement thrills, “Wildwood | dispatch from Simla quoted Wavell ¥ is to open soon in Anchpr-"‘s sayinyz’that “the responsibility . according to Z. E. Egglestnm! for the failure is mine.” ston said the merry-go-round| The India Office announcement were shipped | said “leading Indian politicians” | convened at Simla, India, by the Our Nation’s very future depends upon the lunch you pack for your family. Be as particular of what you pack for lunch as you are of what you prepare for other meals. The best with all the fixin's can be had frem cur comelpte steck of Good Eats at PHONE 16 " 24 Ploacly #/ “ly Two Free Deliveries Daily Idfifimfimm;fi T S e ) S e s Y rrmeelt REVISED LAUNDRY SCHEDULE Owing fo the difficulty of mainfairing delivery equipment and personnel the ALASKA LAUNDRY is forced 1o zone the city as follows, effective MONDAY, JULY 16, 1345, and to continue until further nofice: Monday A M Business district South Franklin Street Hotels Triangle Building 20th Century Apts. Shipping Monday PM Shattuck and Marine Ways Main to Franklin Sts. between 4th Street | and Willoughby Tuesday A M West of Main and Cal- houn Dixon St., North and South Lower Gold Belt Ave. (Includes all of Seatter Tract, Waynor and Casey-Shattuck Tuesday P. M. From Main Street to Star Hill between Fourth Street and Seventh Street. Addition, Willoughby Ave., etc.) Wednesday A M Business district South Franklin Street Hotels Triangle Building 20th Century Apts. Shipping Wednesday P. M. DELIVER FINISHED BUNDLES Thursday A M Gastineau Avenue and DELIVERY OF FINISHED BUNDLES Thursday P. M. DOUGLAS and REGULAR DELIVERIES Saturday A M DELIVER and PICK UP PHONE CALLS Saturday P. M. DELIVER and PICK UP PHONE CALLS Friday A M. Business district South Franklin Street Hotels Triangle Building 20th Century Apts. Shipping Friday P. M DELIVER and PICK UP PHONE CALLS NEW NEW NEW We have BULK SOAP POWDER made especially for washing dishes. It is far better than the ordinary package soap. Makes Dishes Sparkle Makes Dishwashing Easier More Economical » Does Not Harm Your Hands Sold in Bulk or by the Barrel PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries— i0 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A, M. Office of Price Administration RULING The following is a quotation from the American Institute of Laundering Bulletin No. 287: “WASHNGTON, D. C. — Does the minimum bundle provision apply to very small list price bundles? Yes, says OPA. Following is the official OPA statement given in response to an A. I. L. inquiry: “The minimum bundle provision was enacted in order to relieve power laundries from annoyance and burden of handling small bundles. (Illustration: re- questing laundering of only one or two shirts at a time instead of waiting a few more days until a large bundle is accomulated.) It provides that power laundries may impose a minimum charge of $ .50 and $1.0C for cash and carry and finished list price services respectively. If a customer seeks the finished list price service for a bundle containing only one shirt, the laundry may charge $ .50 for cash and carry or $1.00 for delivery of the bundle or at its option charge only the regular list price. “The minimum bundle ruling is under service regulation SSR 17 to RMPR 165.” Please study this schedule carefully, as the driver will be required o adhere to it rigidly. He will not return to any district, other than those designated twice in the same week to call for laundry. This notice should be cut out for future reference. Cooperation of the publie is desired so that it ———f will not be necessary foruste apply minimum — hundle charges allowed by 0. P. A. regulation SSR 17 to RMPR 165 which is quoted above. Due to labor turnover, inexperienced helpjj‘hnd absenteeism, we will be upable to give our peace time service. One fo two weeks wfllbe required for refurn of finished work. ALASKA LAUNDRY, In PHONE 15