The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 27, 1945, Page 2

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PAGE TWO -~ a We These are in Gabardine, wool or part wool . many lovely styles . sizes 10 to 42. $22.50-$39.50 ) s’ NIPPONS T0 PROSECUTE il \ WAR To END Housing Applications Are fiomei News Agency ¢ Makes Announcement- % Other Sources Not Sure (Continued from Page One) i | | | g ther Forecasts s o MAENS o When the you're sg or coat . . one, because they can be used for cither sunny Pick one of our smart styles. Skinner Tackle Twill coats . .. many colors including red, biege and white . . . Sev eral styles . . . sizes 10 to 20. $27.50 to $30.00 CARTER HERE AS - UNDERWRITER ON ALASKA FHA JOB Again to Be Approved Within Territory Arrial in Juneau of John Carter, Chiéf Ur riter for the Federal Hcusiny Administration, newly as- signed to Alaska, marks the opening b4 | templating residential building in the e end of the Pacific war “may | teritory o fme much quicker than we have itherto been entitled to expect.” 3Ragardless of what Emperor irohito's advisers actually do, the llies went ahead with plans to rn loose their full military might | which the Potsdam declaration said $will mean the inevitable and com- The Alaska FHA Office, discon- tinued for some years, is now re- opened and doing business in the Hcuse of Representatives Chamber in the Federal Building here. Mrs. Nadja Triplette, employed for several years by the former FHA office here, has been appointed clerk of the new plete destruction of the Japanese local office, $med forces and the utter de- ion of the Japanese home- Tokyo's Summary Mr. Carter pointed out that it will no longer be necessary now for ap- plications for FHA insured loans or g TOKYO noted the ‘“conspicuous” | priorities for residential construc- gbsence of Stalin's e ultimatum and int efeat of Churchill's G s a sign of Allied disunity lement Attlee announced in irst statement as Britain's signature d the iment But on tion or his | Alaska office. new ered to approve construction prior- alterations to be cleared through the Portland FHA office. Much time should be saved by their processing and approval in the The FHA is empow= rime Minister that “the first thing | ities as an agent of the War Produc- e have to do is to finish the war $vith Japan.” ‘The United States will throw en. Jacob L rmy Ground Forces. on . of them will he firing line Announced as confined alsey’s powerful inued radio silence ff Japan. One Suy actually be Ame to can e air ird Fleet con- as it lost rfort was L‘voo,oun troops Into the task, said ' jeast—being married to the former Devers, Chief of Gertrude Stenslid of Only a frac-| daughter of Mr. and on | Stenslid. Mrs. Carter and their young pressure | Pete Admiral | to Juneau to make their home here. prowled ment in this He plans soo to make field tion Board. Mr. Alaska: to at stranger section Carter is the Southeast no Petersburg, Mrs. Knud now visiting her parents at She will later come on son a urg Previous to his Alaska appoint- Mr. Carter was a Senior Valuator for the Seattle FHA office. trips Wmorning’s 350-plane incendiary raid to Anchorage and Fairbanks, as well ghat set three cities afire nterceptors for successive day as other Southeast Alaska points. Groundwork for the reopening of but none the Alaska FHA office here was laid Japanese sent u 2::2 third k the air against 300 bombers some months ago by Herb A. Red- and fighters from Okinawa raiding man, Chief Underwriter at Portland, rfields - STROM HERE ! Harry J. Enstrom, of Whitehorse, i a guest at the Baranof Hotel - - Emprre Clussiieds Pay’ Phanghali’s al and FHA trip former Juneau architect representative, on a survey through the Territory. Proof of the need for a local FHA office is the fact that at least one application has already b pro- cessed by the Juneau office since Mr. Carter’s arrival here this week. barometer says ‘‘Raim” and . They are really two coats in or ; dM. Rebrends Co QUALICTY SINCE I/SSET | | / | of short-cut service for those con-! ] THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA B FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1945 L % in a lovely Twill smart Skinner Tackle rainy weather . . . German girl after the lifting of the r wimming in the Rhine River at Schiersteih. many. The girl had been s Fralernization Is Now Okay BRAZIL IS TACKLING GREAT TVA g § | | By VAUGHN M. BRYANT (AP Newsfeatures) RIO DE JANEIRO—A vast plan |of agricultural industrial develop- ment involving the colonization of a rich, veritably untapped river valley lis in the initial stages of develop- ment north of here at Petrolan ere the states of Bahia, Alagoas, and Pernambueo join. Under the sponsorship of the Ministry of Agriculture, the Sao | Francisco River Valley development | utimately will colonize the full area lof a potentially productive land 220,000 square miles in area. Right it is getting its start on an ex- ntal scale of 40,000 square | Apolonio | Salles who recently toured the | Unitea States tock special !the Tennessee Valley development | e says the Sao Francisco pro- ject “will undoubtedly be one of the greatest undertakings realized in our countr; culture Minister plant at the Itaparica near Petrolan will soon be furnishing elec al energy, which will be distributed to colonizers of the area free for the first three | years. Other powerplants farther up the Sao Francisco are envisioned in tre future development. “We want tc establish an agro- industrial civil around the Itaparica rapids,” says Salles, “and in an area of 4,000 hec- tares (more than 8,00 acres) we are establishing three centers—one stops his jeep to talk with a n-fraternizatien ban in Ger- AP Staff Phontographer Peter J. Carroll made this exclusive picture. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Paris) SALMO IS SHOWING IMPROVEMENT Ketchikan ri)i.srtvrid Boosts Southeast Total-Cen- fral Area Strong Latest compiatio.. made here By the Fish and Wildlife Service shgw Alaska’s canned salmon pack for the current season still running consid- erably short of last y The Southeast Alas improved scmewhat during the past week by a strong pack from the recently openzd Ketchikan district. Yakutat also is still running ahead cf last year, but the Western and |Icy Straits areas are far under last | season’s record. Bristol Bay, though CONFERENCE d better ithan expected for the “off” yum‘,‘ :s,mx reported 2 weak pack compar- led to last season. In the central division, bright spots continued to be Prince William Sound and Ko- diak, with the pack for the area ahecad of last year. | Pack reports by district for the TOMORROW Py iperiod ending July 21, and totals, POTSDAM, July 27—The “Big with comparative totals for last year, Three” Conference will resume to- gre: morrow. | Southeast Alaska— Prime Minister Clement Attlee Ketchikan District—Reds, will return to Potsdam—without cases; kings, 475; pinks, Winsten Churchnill and Foreign chums, 6,538; cohces, 1,589; Secretary Anthony Eden. 56,868; last year, 40,691, The conference has been in re-| West Coast—Reds, 49; kings, 87; cess since Wednesday, but the Pinks, 2.011; chums, 360; cohoes, American-British - Chinese 8; total, 2,515; last year, 3,862. render ultimatum to Japan ‘Wrangell-Petersburg—Reds, 7,615; issued here yesterday. kings, 42; pinks, 6,762; chums, 2,520; = ]cohces, 408; total, 17,347; last year, 127,436. ul { Eastern—Reds, 3.719; kings, 33; Slrlkers orde'ed {pinks, 4,669; chums, 5062; cohoes, 1603; total, 14,086; last year, 29,099. Back at Dodge Plant .. s s i s |1.076; total, 40,181; last year, 123,325. WASHINGTON, July 27 — The: Icy Straits—Reds, 6,376; kings, War Labor Board today ordered|188; pinks, 5046; chums, 10921; co- 4113 44,153; sur- | was Westetn—Reds, 8,901; kings, 19; 20,000 workers on strike at the Does, 741; total, 23,272; last year, 65"\ Dodge plant of the Chrysler Cor-|327 poration in Chicago to return to| Yekutat—Reds, 15720 work immediately. ipinki, 157; total, 16,427; The board action came a dayiw'sgz' after Under-Secretary of War|Central Alaska— o Patterson said that “B-20 attacks| COPEer River (PR Tebord - on Japan will be reduced within awma: last year, 64,800. natter of days if th i i matter of days if these strikes con-| prince William Sound—Reds, 15,- ; 064; kings, 82; - e — Jap Ambassador To Turkey Kills Wife, then Suicides NEW YORK, July 27.—The Turk- ish radio says that the Japanese| ambassador to Turkey has commit-| Alaska Peninsula (Report to July ted suicide. The broadcast quotes a|14 only)—Reds, 55,002; kings, 1,519; French agency disptch as saying|pinks, 22,635; chums, 40,940; cohoes, Amtassador Tadashi Kurihara killed |3218; total 123,314; last year, 152,- his wife and shot himself to death.|988. The broadcast heard in New York| Western Alaska— stated that the shootings took place| Port Moller (Report to July 14 at the Japanese embassy, where the|cnly) —Reds, 19,692 kings, 16; ambassador has been interned since|chums, 2,466; total, 22,174; last year, Turkey broke off relations with|31,876. Japan last winter. Bristol Bay—Reds, 554,426; kings, B e 3,589; chums, 52,995; cohoes, 1,368; HELM HERE total, 612,378; last year, 959,737, M. E. Helm, of Seattle, is a guest| Pack Totals— at the Baranof Hotel, Southeast—Red last year, 55,082. Cook Inlet—Reds, 72,221; 19,514; pinks, 12,075; chums, 1 cohees, 10,574; total, 127,155; year, 157,760. Kediak—Reds, 117,151; kings, pinks, 68,777; chums, 19918; 378; total, 206,621; last year, 199,184, Chignik—Reds, 16,968; kings, 171; pinks, 2,537; chums, 6,198; cohces, 63; total 25,937; last year, 51,096. kings, 2,771; last king N PACK showing has/ total,’ ;|80 before making the hike again be-} ,|cause too many motorists stopped pinks, 237,941; chums, | 72,911; cohoes, 2,530; total, 328,528;! 68,240; chums, 50,744; total, 170,696; last 1,394; pinks, hoes, 4,425; 07,632. \l—Reds, 347,403; kings, 27,- chums, 152,738; 888,573; last Cent pinks, 343,965; cs, 16,763; total, 80,910. stern—Reds, 574,118, kings, 65; chums, 55,461; cohoes, 1,368; tal, 634,552; last year, 991,613. All-Alaska totals—Reds, 968,014; 32,703; pinks, 412,205; chums, , 22,556; “total 1,693,- Moscow Newspapers Make No Comment, Potsdam Ultimatum MOSCOW, July 27.—Moscow newspapers prominently displayed the news of the British election re: turns. The Soviet papers also car- ried dispatches from Moscow tell- ing of the surrender ultimatum is- sued to Japan. The Russian news- papers did not comment on the ulti- | matum. H —— 'WOODLEY AIRWAYS - HAS 10 FOR JUNEAU 97 { Inbound passengers yesterday on |a Woedley Airways' Boeing Trans- port plant, piloted by Capt. Ernie LCavis, numbered 10 and were as fol- lows: | | From Anchorage: J. O. Floberg, J. {Pitts, Al Gould, Ray Peterson, Mar- ion Folsom and W. F. Thompson. From Cordova: Camella Mitchell, Ed Southard and Ed Auer. From Yakutat: Marian Snilly. Outgoing passengers to Anchor- age were as follows: Arthur Rien- deau, James Carlson, Maudie Ward, Laurrina Burke and Eugene Rhea. Non-Hitching Hiker EPRINGFIELD, Il—John H.' Keest, Sr., celebrated his 76th birth- day anniversary by walking 24 miles | from his home in Middleton, fol]ow-} !ing a practice he started seven years | ago. | But he's going to wait until he's| 704 Juneau Deliveries—10 A. 2 P. M. and wanted to give him a lift. “That's a little embarrassing,” said | | Keest. | - | MOLLOR HERE ; James Mollar, of Whittier, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel ation in this basin |industrial, one urban and one agri~ | cultural.” | Salles says the plan now calls |for a textile factory, a sugar mill and an industrial aclohol distillery ,in the Itaparica area, with homes jand shopping centers especially con- structed for workers. Farm colon- zers in the region will sell their| produce to the industrial and the ur- ban centers. The farms will be built with a| | central house and two smaller ones | | for the farm helpers. The colon- lizer will be given 13 years to pay cut his land and for the first three years no payments will be required. Water, irrigation and efectrical cur-| rent will be prcvided by the gov-| ernment. | The ministry bLuading smnlly truck farms as well as livestock and poultry farms. A large hatchery is 90 per cent finished, says Salles. It is capable of hatching 20,000 eggs at a time and has storage space for, 20,000,000 eggs. The Brazilian - American Food note of | Coffee S '\1lll::.’ Commission 'is planning to build a slaughter and packing house in the area. . “Colonizers will be selceted care- fully, Salles says. “It is necessary that they kave a certain mentality, spirit of industriousness and a desire to make a new home in this rich and potentially productive area.” The Ministry of Agriculture has already purchased more than $2,- 000,000 worth of farm machinery in the United States. D MISTAKEN IDENTITY TWIN FALLS, Idaho,—With a box reserved for all four nights of the rodeo here, Mayor Harry Denton of nearby Kimberly decided to share his chelee space with a serviceman. Spotting a uniformad man head- ing for the ticket office, Denton cheerfully led him to the box where | he discovered bis guest was a laun- dry truck driver. Schilling VACUUM PACKED COFFEE CANNING APRICOTS $1.95 g KERR JARS All Sizes Jelly Glasses Canning Is Worthwhile M. and Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Roat Orders Delivered Anytime! This Year! We Have an EXTRA FINE Display of Fresh Fruits and Vegetahles NOW Beet Greens, Turnip Greens, Radishes, Green Onions, Cucumbers, Lettuce, Green Peppers, Bunch Carrots, Summer Squash, Crooked Neck Squash, Cauliflower, New Peas, Tomatoes, Celery, Rhu- barb, New Cabbage, Avocados, Limes, Cantaloupes, Honeydews, Plums, Peaches, Cherries, Crab Apples, Oranges, Grapefruit, Gravenstein Apples, Green Apples . . . . and Many Other Good Things o Eal! /4 TWO DELIVERIES DAILY Al A N PIGGLY WIGGLY /o yor VICTORY!. A“ L ,ublaré'/ PHONE 16 or 24

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