The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 28, 1945, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT Naval Clique Will Dictate Nip Surrender =~ | which the Japs have been Captured Jap Writer Sast W e T Luzon Fighting Main- fained by Dlsc|pI|ne By RUSSELL BRINES ated Press War Correspondent) MANILA, July 28 —Starving Japa-| wASHINGTON Debate con- troops deep in the Northern ginyes in the Senate on the peace on mountains are being held t0 ¢harter and it is umcertain when the war under severe discipline by| 4 vote will be taken. high-ranking officers who intend to BULLETINS PORTLAND Flames leaping along the mountain ridges of the Tillamook Forest fire threaten en- trapment of several thousand fighters cities told | LONDON- | ford and Asquith, Mrs. | Asquith, died today at the age | 81. She was the widow of Former Prime Minister Herbert Asquith, (Assoe fight a delaying action as long as possible, Ken Murayama, former Lomei war correspondent, declared’ today. He recently surrendered to the Americans. | Murayama, who is well known to many pre-war American Far Eastern WASHINGTON — Alben Barkley today started his ninth majority leader of the Senate. EATTLE—Seattle District U. S. Army for removal Stikine River of 2 o'clock, August 4, of snags from the some 10 miles north Alaska correspondents, predicted that J,«pqn would surrender within a few week nd that the decision would be (ll(‘ tated by a Naval clique which has been in the ascendency since the| fall of Premier Tojo a year ago. He told me that thousands of civil-| POTSDAM-—Prime Minister Att- lee and Foreign Secretary Ernest| fans—mostly women and children— Bevin arrived tonight for immedi- had been left to shift for themselves| 2t¢ resumption of the “Big Three” behind the irregular Japanese lines Conference. or were starving in barren mountain | retreats. Murayama, who was Domei's Eng- lish-language service director in Shanghai at the time of Pearl Har- bor, said the entire Luzon campaign! was fought as a holding action in order “to prolong the war and kill as many Americans as possible with, the hope of gaining as favorable a By RICHARD O'MALLEY peace as possible, | % e Born in New York 34 years ago, ‘}?I];)OARD ADM. McCAIN Murayama surrendered to patrols of the Thirty-eighth Division when the Japanese Army was in the moun- tains behind the Wawa dam. ‘ - 'PLANE HITS JAPAN 2 WAYS; RETURNS WITH BITS OF SOIL layed) —Lt Unionville, Conn., and brought back a bit of it. Returning from a recent mission, |from the wheels of his plane. \ Im not sure just how it happen- | led,” he said as he lounged against the Corsair. “I went into a dive at 6,000 feet and kept right on the tar- get. The ground came up awfully fast but T was busy. KILLED IN BOMBINGS Americans in Jap Camp Right in Heart of Raided Area SAN FRANCISCO, July Z&Radlo Tokyo said today 10 American! prisoners of war were killed, p were missing and nine others hun in Wednesday's Superfortress raid | cn Kawasaki, industrial city be- ! tween Tokyo and Yokohama. GEI JOB BA(K The prisoner camp is within the| | crowded city, said the broadcast, monitored by the P}”LADFLPHIA July 28.—Harry eral Communications Commission, G00dman, 34, the first veteran to |institute court action in Pennsyl- vania to regain his pre-war job, has |been rehired unconditionally, | Philadelphia Office of State Selec-! tive Service announces. bump. ; “That was made by my belly, United States of America. | {tank being ripped off. It was a pretty cloce call, T guess.” |little mustache |hair. His mates think he is quite a pilot. —— e 'VETERAN BRINGS ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.—R. L. Van Nostrand admitted after a mag- June, 1941, had filed suit in U. S. azine paid $100 for his ideas on District Court here against L. E. Mushroom culture that he never had Winter Co., charging that it had re- grown one. fused to rehire him as a journey- “But,” he continued, “all the ma- man plumber after he was medically terial I've read says they are easy discharged from the Army in De-| to grow.” | cember, 1943. The company insisted ———— {that they were willing to take back Records of comets go back as far|the honorably discharged soldier, but as the beginning of the third mil-|that a labor union had objected. lenium, B.C, when a comet was ——. observed in China. BUY WAR BONDB U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MERIDIAN TI Max. temp. | TODAY last | Lowest 4:30a.m. 24 hrs. 24 hrs* | temp. temp. Precip. E Weather at Station 4:30 a.m. 44 36 Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Rain Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy 64 36 61 55 66 87 3 57 53 48 31 46 47 49 49 51 48 45 Anchorage Barrow Bethel Cordova Dawson Edmonton Fairbanks Haines Juneau Juneau Airport 51 41 Ketchikan b4 49 Kotzebue 55 51 McGrath 41 Nome Northway Petersburg Portland Prince George Prince Rupert San Francisco Beattle Sitka Whitehorse Wrangell Yakutat 42 43 *—(4:30 am. yesterday to 4:30 a.m. today) MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN M. Today Height of Waves (Sea Condition 2 feet 1 foot Calm Calm Missing Pt Fog Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Rain Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Cloudy 55 49 46 Fog Reports trom Marine Stations at 10:30 A. WIND Dir. and Vel Calm ESE Station Cape Decision Cape Spencer Weather Temp. Cloudy 52 Cloudy 50 Eldred Rock Cloudy Calm Five Finger Light dy Calm Guard Island rizzle 53 S Lincoln Rock Cloudy SSE 3 Calm Point Retreat Cloudy : Calm Calm MARINE FORECAST: Southeast Alaska—Variable winds mostly west- erly, north’ portion, and easterly to southeasterly backing to northerly to northeasterly tonight over south portion. Wind velocities under 15 miles per hour. Variable cloudiness. Cloudy | fire | ruction | | -The Countess of Ox- Margot | the of | America stood revealed as an un-| year as! Engineers will open bids at| Wrangell, S FLAG- have since announced that OFF JAPAN, July 25.—(De- gcting under authority from Mos (jg) Francis Smolen of cow and that the church in Ru: touched Japan has forbidden the holding of s » ' any {he grinned a trifle bewilderedly as wnich do |crewmen scraped grass and weeds ple I knew there was barely time to pull Bishop of San Fran |out and as I did there was an awful | foPolitan of the Rus (erend Theophilus’ Smolen is a little gent with a church’s properties in Alaska has|—— and short ‘blond been recognized by the cour 1 | | COURT CASE T0 | the July 21, COURT ACTION OPENS AGAINST | RECTOR OLENDY 'Local Cleric Is Ordered fo Show Cause Why He Should Not Be Ousted Moscow moves for domination of Greek Orthodox Church in| derlying issue behind litigation concerning the St. Nicholas Church | properties in Juneau, which came {up in the U. S. District Court here !this morning when F. Evgeni Ol-| endy was cited to show cause why | he should not be enjoined from ! possession of local church pmpcr- ties. The defendant, who has ruccmly been acting as rector of St. Nich-| olas Church, known as the Rev. | Eugene Olendy, is stated, in an| affidavit filed in support of the show cause motion, to have come to Alaska, from Edmonton, Canada, | under false pretenses. The affiant, John Zlobin, the| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA | EIRE’ S NEW PRESIDENT GREETS CROWD Dick Powell Free fo Wed June Allyson LOS ANGELES, July Joan Blondell's divorce the hearing on her | decree last July she testified that the actor had been guilty of many |acts of cruelty, including a de- mand that she “get the of the house.” | New York stage, — Dick of Riverside, Calif., Fowell was free today to marry the ¢megred unscathed from a plane | rising young actress, June Allyson. from { Powell became final yesterday. In interlocutory hell out Powell's marriage to Miss Allyson, who came to Hollywood from the is expected to he SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1945 | connaissance, carrying finding wounded and performing \other duties. Many dogs gave their |Lives. At this minute these dogs ,are serving on all thc Jup fronts.” . MISCALCULATION TWIN FALLS, Idaho — “It didn’t seem possible that poles so far apart | |would carry wires,” Jack Adams, 27, said when he messages, | crash. Adams had been flying a few feet above the ground peacefully spread- ing insecticide over pea, bean and alfalfa fields when his plane struck a telephone line and was demolish-~ ed. L e MR. MRS. SAIKE HERE Mr .and Mrs. H. E. Saike, of Aberdeen, Wash., are guests at the | Baranof Hotel. B BUY WAR BUNDS AT Attention . . . Out-of-Towners and packing of out-of- We give special attention to the selection own orders. | | 'FIGHTING DOGS | held next September. If you live on the route of one of the mail boats or have a hoat coming to town send us your order. We guarantee satisfaction. |Right Reverend Archimandrite of| SEAN T. O'KELLY, newly elected president of Eire, is pictured above with his wife waving to the crowds which lined the streets in Dublin the Rus: Catholic Orthodox Greek| of the UMI(‘(I\ States of America in Alaska, al-| leges that the defendant came Alaska with the announced inten- | tion of assisting the affiant in the latter's work as Priest at Sitka.| Instead of doing so, the defendant | ir alleged to have arrived in Ju-| neau and immediately taken over | possession of all the church's prop- erties in this city, proclaiming him- self to be in full charge of the church, its possessions and prop- erties in Juneau. | an Church The defendant is also aileged to he is vices by of any priest or bishop in the churches in America | not recognize the com- | te and absolute authority of the in Russia. complaint in the action at law before the Federal Court here was brought by At- | torney H. L. Faulkner in the name | church The present The next thing ©f the Most Reverend Theophilus, 0 and Met- n Orthodc Greek Catholic Church of the It is stated that the title Most Rev- | to all the| s and that the Rt. Rev. John Zlobin, of Sitka, has the church’s properties in Alaska under his jurisdiction. The complaint further charges| that the defendant Olendy wrong- ! (fully entered the St. Nicholas Chmch and priest’s house in Ju-| neau on March 24, 1945, and with- | l\eld possession of it from the! plaintiff—but that the plaintiff ob- | tained possession of the properties again on July 20, 1945. At um(‘ the plaintiff placed locks on | the doors of the church and lhl‘ priest'’s house, together with a, warning to trespassers, but that on 1945, the defendant broke | the locks and wrongfully re-en-| | tered the buildings and has since | Goodman, who was inducted in | unlawfully withheld possession of | same from the plaintiff. Restoration of. the properties ln‘ the plaintiff is prayed for. l - Emnire wrni-aos bring naunsll L. D WEBB A Chr BOYD FIELD Hear Evangelist Webb’s Final Message Advantages of Being | istian The CHURCH OF CHRIST will continue to hold Weekly Services at the C. I. 0. Hall Sundays at 11:00 A. M. and 8 P. M. Attend the Church of Christ Where Christ and Christians Meet during his inauguration ceremony. to| COASTAL AIRLINES ON FLIGHTS FRIDAY Alaska after- 56 via sterday following: Outgoing p: Coastal Airlir ncon were the To Tenakee: J. M. Slagle, Jennie Joseph, Mrs. Florence e and Albert Howard 0 Hawk Inlet: Billie Jack Incoming passengers were as fol- lows From Excursion Inlet: W. W. Fin- n, Jr. and Carl Eilertson. rom Hoonah: Mrs. Pete Fawcett, Mike Knudson and Alice White. Frem Pe an: Don Milnes, T. S. codman, Albert Schwandt, George Henkel, Frank C. Binchus and Steve Mr Gaim- 1 Hawk Inlet: Mrs. Laura Mentero. m Gustavu m Ketchikan Jim Dodson. Gust Gastavisen, TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY for use on sinzle Heavy ashestos jacket. electric shaver. Ask Mc- stock clerk at Lite Co. SMALL OVEN burner. Schick Daniel, wiil be paid f 13 to the ide on or persons break- ing into house and cabins, on premises of Sumdum, rd Cove, Endicott Arm. D. A Kmlak Box 3012, Junecau, Alaska. REWARD inform: tity of pe $25.00 lead SINGLE record player A(thn)(‘x\h in mahogany case. lent con-) dition. Green 783. GENTLEMEN—Would you like to come home after a hard day’s work and listen to a radio that| you can receive programs from New York, Frisco, So. Amcrica,| Paris, Berlin and all parts of the| globe. And have record player with the radio so that you could play your favorite pieces? If so,| then come to the Winter & Pond | Apts., Apt. 2, between 11:30 a. m. and 4 p. m, I have one to sell. as GOSPEL MEETING B3:60 P, SUNDAY C.1.0. UNION HALL FIRST and GOLD STS. Local Minister (International Soundphoto) Donneill C. sgary, O. F. Benecke and W. R. Carter. From Sitka: J. Zarinoff and [€nute Robsahn. From ind E. Petershurg: Parker | ‘Whitehead - lotomohve Dashes Bruce G To Church Rescue DECATUR, Il1 ened the Antioch Christian Church cut in the rural reaches. The bat- tle seemed to turn against fire com- panies from three communities when three nearby wells went dry. A gathering crowd experienced the thrill of drama building to a climax and . . . from Decatur, four miles away, Baltimore and Ohio locomo- No. 2235 whisked to the scene 3,000 gallons of water in its l'hc church was saved. e M()ORF.. IN JUNEAU K. A. Moores, of Seattle, cuest at the Baranof Hotel. - KENNEDY HERE Richard Kennedy, of Haines, guest at the Gastineau Hotel. - - with tank. is Any exchange of goods for prices above the ceilin prescribed by law is a black market transaction. ! —Flames threat- | ~ T0 BE ENROLLED - IN AMER. LEGION \ NEW YORK July 28—Fighting | dogs of the K-9 Corps will be en- rolled in the American Legion upon | discharge, National Headquarters of the Legion Veterans K-9 Cor nnounced today. “K-9 Corps dogs played an im- portant role in our victory in | Furope,” the announcement said, “acting sentries, scouting, re- Juncau Deliveries— i0 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivi ery—10 A. M. Rt R T HAELICRAFTER --- SX238A RECEIVERS Several new factory models NOW AVAILABLE and will be delivered in Juneau within iwo or three weeks. These receivers are Hallicrafter's best, 15 tubes, six bands covering from 550 kilocycles to 42 megacycles . . . Complete with Speaker in Case—$240 No Priority Necessary Will accept orders with small deposit UNTIL MONDAY EVENING. For Further information call a t ALASKA ELECTRONICS 217 Seward Sireet Or Phone 62 hefore 10 P. M. 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